University of Wisconsin Madison - Badger Yearbook (Madison, WI)

 - Class of 1919

Page 1 of 594

 

University of Wisconsin Madison - Badger Yearbook (Madison, WI) online collection, 1919 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1919 Edition, University of Wisconsin Madison - Badger Yearbook (Madison, WI) online collectionPage 7, 1919 Edition, University of Wisconsin Madison - Badger Yearbook (Madison, WI) online collection
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Page 10, 1919 Edition, University of Wisconsin Madison - Badger Yearbook (Madison, WI) online collectionPage 11, 1919 Edition, University of Wisconsin Madison - Badger Yearbook (Madison, WI) online collection
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Page 14, 1919 Edition, University of Wisconsin Madison - Badger Yearbook (Madison, WI) online collectionPage 15, 1919 Edition, University of Wisconsin Madison - Badger Yearbook (Madison, WI) online collection
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Page 8, 1919 Edition, University of Wisconsin Madison - Badger Yearbook (Madison, WI) online collectionPage 9, 1919 Edition, University of Wisconsin Madison - Badger Yearbook (Madison, WI) online collection
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Page 12, 1919 Edition, University of Wisconsin Madison - Badger Yearbook (Madison, WI) online collectionPage 13, 1919 Edition, University of Wisconsin Madison - Badger Yearbook (Madison, WI) online collection
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Page 16, 1919 Edition, University of Wisconsin Madison - Badger Yearbook (Madison, WI) online collectionPage 17, 1919 Edition, University of Wisconsin Madison - Badger Yearbook (Madison, WI) online collection
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Text from Pages 1 - 594 of the 1919 volume:

iSfifiSf P t 1 . . ' ' ' .. ■ ' c- ' i:5:::Gr ' --i3iM u J riiil(K iiv( hief Business Manqfjfi: U m hfipa njCf ssrrituro and ii fM.isiim bvHic CLASS o[igiC)o| hc UNWn SII ' VofXXlSCONSIN g1 Mudison V()lume ' lliiilv=1hree !Ki r 1 Ilia lunik ti; r tralr tii thr inrK lit ' thr lliiiurrsitu iiilm haur ininroM r Ariiiii an ' aull• ' 31ir ftortrmr mat uiuilit inakra rinlit iiutat lir rnlBV .an thr llrlrInr that nylit makra miuht imuit br fnrrupr rBtabl Hl r ■ fflithmit this, tlrerr ran hr mi irarr iii tlir ImTrl .- ' aD ratabliah thia yrrat pnnnplr thrar mm arr titillhig. if iirrraaanj. tn ntur thrir liiira efir pniir. thr hupr. all thr biraamu iif thrtr Alma fHatrr uu luitli tlirm. ty ih ' f rj f 7LL I.ILiTliK W. A Waitfr Lfi and Aibf-BS Arti« ' R R Aldkrt Raymovd William Aldrk LlTTlFIU RY C ALIIOl ' N All ( ,ROV| R V. AlMON Roland I Ai ti-nmoien 1 Bli ( Lkwi llOYI . W II Ami: RTo ; |ra AihRLij Anderson Artiii ' R L ndi-:rson Earl Anderson Fred Anderson MoRr.AN U:I iNALD Anderson I Ierbkrt Pv ' llen Avtes Addie D Apple ( EORCE S AppLEYARD Clieford V Arneson llDWARD A ArPIN Francis C Arthur Rl ' DOLPH A AsaiENBRENER Cariton Leroy Austin Kenneth V Austin iERBfcJlT LaFLIN AVERy Wayne Axtell Henry L. Babbiti Leo John Baohhuder Fari A Bachmann Arthur Kay Bailie Fdc.ar C Bain J BrO«JK.-. BlAiSDl CillMAN tX RR i l t William Jeefi.rsc Leo J. Blikd Charles W Blod(,ett Harold H BLopciETT David Bi oodoood (;f.or(;e.J Bioor Newell Sti nn n IV)ardman SeYMOIR OxiK iiOAHDMAN Alexander I LVmi nstein Fdwin W Boe ; John Boenio tXjNALD L Bonn RolLAND DuRFEE BOHNStiN ' aN LoREN EiOHNSON LBRIY Wv. Choi ETT Beaqi Caldwei l Alidley B Calkins jA«m Graeius Calvert John Waltij Campbell CiEoHt E t ARUVlN Paul WniTTiiiR Car Byron ) L jw ( :a PENTER N C Ha W I I B r ! loBAH I I ' DW AR Frank C Bonwell FdWIN R li(K)TH WiLi lAM H Borden Lemuel F Bovee William Auc.ustus Boubr Lemuel Ricketts Boulware Cail Vanden Braak William Russel Bradford Norman Conyers Bradish Charle-s Fdward Braiv jfr R R. Bragg Milton M Bramlette Clarence Aloi t Brandt i R Bra PENTER Mil Ic.N ARPI NTER RisMii H Carpenter Kosi Makmi.n Carrei I. Lawri NCE KiNziE Carroll W Carson i I H C, Frld PliRCn AL FULLI-R CaSE Marcus Thomas Casey Mathew Joseph Casey Thomas Bernard Casey Dan ( a s CiEORCE Anthony Chandler William Stephen Chandler Roy J . Charmock Melvin Leslie Chase John Pollock Childe Carter C ( hristiancy RoMI RT 1 C hristy Austin 1 Baird I ' lNl.EV Bakf.r Andrew J aoidBrann Stamly Richard Clac;ue 1 Howard Jonathan Brant Edward J liRAUN El MIR R Cl ARK i aMM{ Hen-ry H Bakki n James GioRGE Clark. Jr I C;ilARI,ES WALKIiR BaLDWIN John Lindsay Clark Robert H Clark CiroRcE Smith I aldwin MiLEORD BREIDSTER 1 IaRRY Mcl.Air.MLlN BaI DWIS Roland Edward Brennan LiioMAs CJ LLiER Clark • Ray Baldwin Alliu Li oyd Breyvocel Maubii F ( ;abrett Cleary Stanley 1. Balmer 1 IeNRY R BRIG..S ( JlL n U Imi RY C!LEVr.l.AND. Jh. • C.i-oRr.E Veyne Banta Hiu hi:rt Brightman ( H l ' l ) s ( Ml MIRD 1 RoutRT Lynn Barger Edward George Brittinc.ham WllllVMl (IIIFORD ' ■ .■ i Georoe Barker Louis Georc e Brittincham W 11 1 lAM 1 RANGES CODY • U Maurice E Barnett. Jr Herbert 1 Brockhausen EVERETI LelaNd(XJLE Clii TON Lawrence Barnum Lawrence J Brody Haroi d H (;ole M-J Wallace A Barr Dudley C Brooks William Harold Coultte AuiERT C Barrett Melvin Leroy Brorby Charlf.s L Collins • Kenneth C Barrows Eugene Edward Brossard Clark Smith Collins • ' Deane Smith Bascom Matthew IiRo.ssARD Harold C Collins • loHN Sprac.ue Bauman Marcus Lulinc Baxter Alois Brown Clarence L Coi.ville George E Brown John Commons Donald Elliott Compton • • Richard White Beach Hi-j bert Hi-jviry Brown- .Arnold J Beck Hugh E Brown William I Comstock • George W Becklk Lee Markham Brown Rellis G. Conant • David V W Beckwith Lloyd Brown Bernard M ( ' onaty • Stanley E Beers Neil Winthroi- Brown George Tolman Condron Ray li Bemrens Stacey Lewis Brown C ' ri:de 1 Iaymond Conli-:y John liLi.swoRTH Belden Sydney I Brown EImmETT J ( ONLEY 1 Ienry Harold ( onley Stanley Raymond Belden ThERON a l ROWN Ma Harry S Belowsky Warren Richardson Brice Edward Hanson Connor ««-. : Henry John Beneke Orvin RiaiARD Brunkow El gene P Connor Maurici; Bennett 1 Iarold John Bryant William D C onnor 1 loMER A Benton James Alan Bryden Perry Baker Buqianan Julian DarstConover John K Benton 1 U i.H Eranki in C.ON ' RFY Carl Mermen Berger Dean a Bu(j master ( ' tKsl 1 u s !onway Edwin L Berg Earl 1-rancis Bielow H MiiToN BiGuR Cook Max J Bekg Benjamin 1 1 Bl ' ll |0HN ( OPI I NI Nathan Beutei i Harry A Bi ' llis I-RANiIsL; ( OSt.ROVE Edward Lyman Bill Eguij t B Bundy (. HE.SI1R ( otter UomR BniER Morgan J [Finney (hari ils !■; Burden Raymond M CoucHl in Charles McI ' etridi-.e Burgess John an Bri ' Nt Cox Linton Cox l-RANK VicroR BiRoi Mi-:AD Burke ««K Gi-oRoE I-.AToN Bird Thomas N Burke Harry Craig « .. James N Bird Roy I-redi rick Burmeister Walter Soott Craig k (.eorgeMarstinsBishoi- Donald R Bvirnham Herbert L Cramer Lawson Waterman Bishoi ' Alexandiji Burns tJARROL ChI-STE« OaNE Stuart Au ' RI-.d Bishop Harlow D. Burnside Wll I iam I Ianlon Cj ane • • AnaiM. Black liDWARD LaNGWORTHY BuRWI LL Marion C Cjianij ifi d ( .UY Black EIarlJ BusEJi Lee W BuTLiiR LaURI N( F M Cj ary • Loiris B BI.ACHLY E|NL IkjFF OaWI-ORD Jami-sBiair MlJ RIII E BUTI.ICR Robert W(Xid Crawford • JixiN CxjvoDi Blair Edward David Caiioon l5oNAi D 1 Iayne Crothers • • • • -,• , r mln II It 7 •••••• iS • y • r • • Wendell H Chotiikrs Bryant M Evans Arthur William Gower Solon D Oowrll Iakies Ambrose Evans Raymond Carl Grams J CleOHC.K CjtOWNIIART V ' iLERED Evans i:t i.ENE L Grant AnTHi ' R Crowns Norton Eversoli. Ra Andeb.son Grant John II C:irMM|NV.S RaYMONO I IlnRY ClMMISV Carl A. Everson MlKlllHl 1 Grapir Louis Philip Ewald i;i wM.i. (:..iiins(;ratiot m IIaRL W tU ' RML R..hl HT NnRLW Grashorn ROOFRT ClRRAN LoiisH Fa.irion 1 II..SHS 1 li sRv Green tARL CuRRlE DonC I ' aith Kl sNP 1 1 S ( .Mi i-.nfield Pail Moi ser CirRRY Piiu IP 1 Uni EY Falk 1 KI 1 M l,l.|..ORY Leslie CiRTiN Kenneth Curtis Frwin K Ianta W, 11 1 1 M ll 1 1 1 R Grecson J Merriil 1 ' argo t 1NALDS lARlEY Gil 111 Ri L.ii.Hi.E Grieve Frederick V. Curti s ■Kari R N Grill J [.EVERETT Farley loiiN liDW ARD Grimm Frank Dalev Charles Faroi ' har. Jr. ■)0M ,.„ A tjROSSE R M pti W Dame Jack Haston Farrand Wai rFR Frank Grubb hssL A Danielson Karl I Iaertel l- ' AtrEROAai W ILI lAM GuilICK.SON koULRT MOHRAY DaVUISON JFJ.OME I FeENEY IiiDsoN LeRoy Feldman Wll 1 lAM W GURNEY DiDiivH Davis Ai.iiERT K Guy Oak Rohlrt Davis ) lll.llERT O, FeLTFN mJ RlssEii tiARDiNiH Davis William Friend Ferguson. Jr Elmer Otto IHabhegi er Tration 1 looKER Davis Albert Charles Fiedler Jacob Sidwell Hackney. Jr David III 1 iott Day 1 Iarry W Field Carl Leopold Haddorf • Harry C Dej n Warren Louis Fish O ' .CNR F Hagen Rl nOLPH W Dehi ER Roy Frederick Fischer WvuKis 1Im,,ii • Joseph B Demin . Lloyd K Fit: Gerald IIarky Hi 1.M1AHD Haley Charles H Dennis William C Fitigerald I..11N A llMl Dean R Dickey Martin Alfred I ' ladoes J..11S W 1 Im 1 i,s,.si Ham • F iiiL Diehl Leon F. Foley Earle W DiMMirii Horace Wfbster Foskett i 11 ( Mm i. i;k • Robert Conrad Disque Carlton Harwood Foster Iami-I1vmi.lii.)N LiAiYD .Alli ' .n Hammer Clj rf-nce O Docken Flow ARD T. F-OULKES Joseph Conway Donn Dwight S Fowler James Harry Hansberry Chester C Dodc.e William M I-owler Arthur G Hanson „ Newell P Dodc.e C:ONRAD M Fox Malcoi m P Hanson J_IHIN A Dohertt t NALD DohR Hi r.H H Francis WiLMAM P Hanson RiEMAR .August Frank Roi.iRTl-; Mardell Howard B Doke Charles Dillir Fratt. |r JAMisli AKD Hardy Portland Chase Donaldso James Robert Frawi.ey Wii LiAM C Fra:ii:r 111 lURT [■ HaRMAN James S Donnelly James R Dinovan lii NjAMiN L Harper Herbert George Freese Carl Q 1 Iarris Gerald J Doonan Ralph Theodore F- ' riedmann John W Harris Don H Harrison John Fonda Downing Chauncey Frisbie Chester M I «ake Al.LARD eRNE F- R0GNER Loddell Harrison •mJ Francis Leo Dklw FIenry Chester Fuller RUSSEL Hartman Floyd Ricjiard L rlw WiLLARD L F ' L ' LI.ER Raymond Clarence Hartunc William Fdward Drips Frank Joseph Funke II Lawrence Hastings • NlOMil AS C I  n|.ENC.A Vernon V Hatch HlbEJ tC DlECKER John L. Calvin Rollin Curtis Hawkes • F Ryan DtrFFY .Albert Ganswindt F )nald L Hay Charles B. Dunn C lenn L Gardiner Ellsworth Hay Willis H. Dirst Milton Leroy Gardner William J Hay. Ir -A- John George Garibaldi Udward Grant Garnsey Carl I-rederick Hayden Graham Sanfobd Easson Cl EMENT F )NALD F-IaYDEN • Starr Sedgwick Eaton George A Garrii an Jack Hayden Hoi.iRT Hayden Harold A Eaton- M Harold Gasser Paul A Ebbs Cyrus John Gatton Ai-Dls.- Haves Raymond Edlea Stanleich Keys Caveney HAKiEs A Hayes Allen Aaron Edwards Edward A. Gehl John Harry Hayes Louis Hayes Ml Leroy E Edwards John F Geisse Lester C Getzloe Eugene T. Edwards Matmew R Hayes Timothy Egan Carl Montague Gevers William P Hayes Herman M Eostad Percival DeWitt Gibson Raymond Mathias Heckmas Carl A Eicke W. Sydnor Gilbreath, Jr loiiN R 1 honiE WiLMER H Eicke C ARL C GiLMAN HAsMR.-.KllirNFJ. Arthl ' R M Eide ROBFJIT L CillJMAN 1 ii..v(Ns 1 M I Ieiferan William H. Filer Albert F Gii more (,1..H,.L IhlsL John Ek Edwin Sharretts Ei di r Bernard Roiurt i;i eason ADoini W Hlimg WllIMM W GlIIKIP Milton J F Ieissmann RolandR Held Ned R Ellis WllllAM II (.lO.IH Robert C. Ellis Alfred Lai ri nci-. tjoD|.-REY FrFdI Hei I.REN John Horatio Helmi!R Will I AM ( Hl.LMlE Elwixid C Ellison ' -«. Fred Ellison Erwin F Goerner John T A Ely [■redW Coetz Victor Hi mming Cari Mallery Emmej«io Hugh GcKXiiNs JaMI s l-RASKLIN HeMSINC FJlRNIEd HlNDERM N • Arthur Albert Iirdmann Charles James C .i dammi r Samuel F C.ood W ILI ARD ' FrDMANN GioRc.E VON li Henderson • Hilver FuRiT I:rnst RALItl U. C;.K1DING Wll BERT C; 1 h NDRI J S Ray S Frlani«.n c:arl a Goslin ClJlRI-NCE W 1 IenIWICKSON • NoRiMAN v. Ernst Edwin Fish Gould J FiRWlNHENN Donald Herrick ARTra ' R ElAPEEAND Stephf-N Crover Gould RollandR Etter Stevens Coiri.D Harold Hesemann • • • • w it w w It -w 1 ' it l| i u i I ' lOYI) Hl.WLlI 1-llX.AK I ll-YMANN ) AMFs S Uiij i:y J- MIL I III : II I III I I T I IlKSIIEIMHR IS L )DC.t I IOA(. IM l l-,MPbTrK HOARP. Jk. 1 1 c: n ii:i I K ll I.IW1X)N S lloi Philip P 1 1ol:i.i;r I-RliULBIC A I lOMANN Harmon I ' ortir Hih k N,.t, ) ll,«.riR l-.DWARl. Ilcl ll H.. M 1 IW n Horn l.h 1 lo KS A DAY V M )KS U- J R 1 1 HN R M S 1 loRN :R W ILLIAM li ll.KTT l-REDliRlcK V Irish W ALTER IsBl.E IjLMAVI: Rlinhold Jacoui KoLAND ARTIU ' R JaCODSON Raymond I homas Jackson ISiRKiN LciiiJ T James KatmoM) 1 Ilrnij James AkHUR A jAMItSON (ARL K JaNDORI: AlmisJ.iiirs (ARL W Jlllll JAMISW J.NKISS l.YLi Nl I. .N Jenkins I.dwardJ Jinnett David Harry J ENNIW.S Henry a John Alijeri S Johnson ( LARES, eS Johnson IesseJ Johnson IL1IAM b Johnson (. Wallace Johnson 1.1 oNARD Marion Johnson Kosu.El-.JoHNsi.N Rom RI (iM ION JollNV N All HI I. VW.liam Johnson Li I and Syi m sii r Johnson Raiih 111 HliANh Johnson I HlrnardJohns ,n t|o«ARD Johnson K.SSE1LJOHNS.JN W Ai II R M ' l Ni iR Johnson Ai 111 R I Randoi I ' ll Johnson ( HARl I ■. I Rl Dl Rll JOHNSION A. I. II. I R Ji.lLlY HI..M M JoNlS (HI Sli H I.IoYdJoNES UoNAED ( jrtUN Jones NoHiimoi ' JoNis ' |CT  R Hrt.o JoNi-:s (i t- ;liERT JosEPHSON William Kenneth Jcdevine Daevan C Julian Edward W Karst Ceark I mory Ka. El man Pav ' l Kayser ( I-ARI-NtE 1£ KeeLI-Y I-Idwin M. Keme William Michael Keeley Kennilth Moseey Keeley Asiier Esaias Kelty Earee Kemp John G Kerch Homer Kestes I Nichols , Ke , Orton Keyes LAND KihHE I OS Rl ISS KlDDI-R :iiEL r Y I- Ki JLDI Art Art Hdw ice:i Si IV Ar IHL ' R K|I,IM ' I-.IL (a I NN Harmon Klemme AixiNis Kletzien LoYAi H Ki et:ien M Knickeri o(j er I R I 1 KnORR L R W Knott kRD I-rancis Knott AM Wai ti-:r Koch RD Rl ' ssele Koe HlcoJ Kohr Hu ;ene Kornreich Herbert K Krach Arthl ' r James Kraeovix: GlSTAM ' S T Kral ' se 1-REDERICK (1 KrEECEJ V ALTER I- KrLSCHKE David Benjamin Kuenzli David R Lacey James Leroy Lacy U ' lLHER LaMHERT Miles Landers Richard K Lane Alexander D )T LANcii He:rhi:i. Artiil ' r Lance Wesley E. Lan .emak ( areJosei ' H Langhofe Edward Conyers P Larra I IP 1 Ienry Lasher Ra I W, I., S 1 I Henry M L1..11 DonaidC. Llhw Almn i: Li ntz Lowell Aisiin 1 Iridirux Lioi WllllAM Pi ' llMA Hi oil L I I WIS PiRClVAI. P I.IW Raymond l Rlllc Roy E Lewis Stevenson Pace Theodore. Lewis William T Le;wis Geo« ,e Wini i- ; Lewis Gl ' stae He.imar Lindherg Raymond I Linehan Clemens M Lins Edward M Lutnoston Raliii E Loed Jesse D Loiierc. C:eari;nce Albert Loesoier Cedric r- ' Lcjcan Arthur J Lonsdori- Casey V LooMis John L L ximis ()REANIX S LiX MIS I Ierbert O Lord Alvin M Loverud Arthur Ludej s Li_slie Luders I loMER J Ll ' DDEN Gerald Edward Li eiiuen Elmer W Luecker Robert A Luhmann Ale Llnd ADEL.MA LuPTON Raymond O Lyons Lincoln G. McAdam William J McCabe, JR Arthlr L McC ' ai EliRY DoNAI D SiSSON McCandlf_ss John Barton McCarthy R A Mc .iiRE Ed .ar C, Mc :oihm C. Will ardMcGoium Ansley B McGonneli Dl ' NWC .D LoWRIL M.i .NALD Paul Robert McDonald Dyer S McI iwill Lloyd I M(1 .wlll Paios 1 (.ii ry Glenn i iiir Mi 1 Iugh Keiih t-iKMioN McHuc.H Charm sMclN.osH ROI.EKI M, KlosH J (;ori .n MiKvy Bash I rank Mi Ke Bri i.N NUKi GeoRi.E B MlKlNlEY. Jr James I- McManus Cleve A M.AUtlen Oka. R McMurry MORLAND lolIN McMl ' RRY John I Iarrison Mc(,U.AlD William I M Rae Gerald Shi BN McW ILI ia H I Ia( RI1 Ma In Andri  R Mailij RayS Ma 1 l W ' Edwa i 1 Maii. y Gerai dC Malone Heriii Rl V Mandi Wai t R M NDI 1 C.HARI 1 s R Marsiu Inl 11101 M Aliiirt P Makiin B. I Iaroli Martin George L May Clinton M Ma..oun Andrew Roiiert Maker Walter R Mandel Oral Manseim d NollERT MaRKUS RoBEKT Martini. Harry Lioyd Marmiau RiciiardHi .iii Marsh WllllAM Hli.hes Marsh nr • • • nszN vaV Jp v£ l it • • 1 ISI 1 Y I Mar riN r.vM 1- lH U TIN 1 K s i M, Rl IN (Vmi 11, Will s Martin (: Kl. I.IMM-M losi 1 1 HovstR nMAniiws 1 Rl 1. Rll i •. 1 111 Mayer 1. W M IUrr Y Ml l-vsv l-H KoY MllM S In MO « W Ml VWXSOMN I..VH 11 1. Willi I Mfw.ei l.m-. Ir vkli V MlRR ; Merriii W 1. 1 VRl. n MiRKIII. 1 ill 1 1 MlH IN Hri I R R M SER EY Ur 1% i: M YER 1 WH IH.I l-R KsMus Meyer Pmi l s, vv Meyejis lK«i ..N S Ml YRICK Mm IR Mkk II SON Will IVM S l IHX.ETON hlsB ' ml M i-len; Hhsi VMIS Ml FS I ' M 1 Mill RD n M n Hi ckm TH Miller hmii NL Mlll ER Harry Irv M ILER |.- st- i ii Ml loHS Liswi 1 Mitchell Arti VR M.Ul AM Monk 1- DW M 1 L.iRN X MoNSER i 1 nSAKoMlWAN W AP f. 11 M..RMAN |ONt I. M.x. 11 N M. WN Cha CIS MooRE ItLFNN t-,Dw ARD Moore 1 w ILL RD 1- Mo.«E War RL-N t; MlXWK PRASrisJosK ■ ! M.WRIN Ray woso P Mo«Rivsv llRv N S M. ' RSE ClR ris Ui Ni 1K7T MORSELL 1 F M. TIIViY (Jl, .1.E1 l .l OS MORTOS I VMI i Barni: s MoS IEJ (:ll «LES W Moss Iami 1 Ml ■ .AVEN ■VnnunJ M La« RENCt E VIltrpiiy R« V ( Ml 1 S Fl ItFRT r . i- i H Nl 1 Ss 11 HANim Will l M 1 Ni IS 1 n N W 1. Al I N ( :hr Nl l R Ml Ne I IN Wei IN.. I. .N ( NuiR 1 Kd« ARl. W II I AM Nil II 1 Aim loK lt M NII Will lAM 1 AC Nii.iir N4.M 1 Nil Y%INI. Jl 1 . hi RNARii Noble IURRI--..N R N.M1LE S ul 11 K N.wo (, A. 1 I N.Wli.N In W- N..T1 .MM Hamiiion S Ni vvii,. WllL Aha Nl-JlM Warrcn Oaket VicToi JacX-v n Ohe HkRIMRT UIJRIEN • • • • RoUFRT I I t Mll ' RN W VYI  N1 IV, ..H1I1 Al I ANi i-,R McLeod ( Kka C J OIJLN MiJ R1LL|I OvERIlAlK-.il Halsey I- ' rank Owen Rav Sprague Owen 1 IF.NRI ( JIARI Arn -. iiiAioND Pain. Jr. Raymond Palmer Benjamin II P rk Lyman B Park I IeRIIURT PaRKIvH l-RED Parr. Jr. Leonard li Parson LrsTFR I- Patiinson Wai tfr 1- Pah SON Iamls Martin A Payton UiFi-B Pfaril Heknvri, Pfam llMoniY AsimiRY PFl M Hfhi H PllKI V ArIHIR PlllFTTI John R Perkins . RT1I1 ' R I . Pi TFKSOS JamI-s Oamie Pfter.son RiX.ER rR NKI IN PeTERS N CjlARl IS .Vl I.iN PlOHL Wllll M Bl TtlRWORTll Pimi W II HAM lollN PiCKARD William ' ) Pi. h .■ rtiiirJ Pinney I Iaroi d i tio Pinther 1 R PiRViL RODI RT l ' .AYLE.N PoiNDEMER Kari Y Poindi;. iej Harry A I ' m lack Heriilri S PoMERoy STI AR( nI I W l OND Will 1AM PORS Cari Lni IR P ' irter Raymond I: I i rter ( 1 ARi NCE Al III RT Pottini.f:k Ilari H PolllN .l.Jl IIlnrt Mill ih Powell r.Dw RnW Piiwrjts I ' IMLR W II HAM I ' RANCK 1 N S l RI SIOTT ARNOI II l MlllNOW Harry I hiiinow (iLoRi.l. Rl SSELl l RYOR AlfrldJ. 1 i lnir Ri ' ssuL L K iN u RoOERT PtKE Uaii IH W Raiiur I ' Y RaMMU ' I l (JlENN RamMH 1.1 Rai 111 Ramsay JotiN RoiiiiiNs Ramsey Irfd Rankl Vilas I. Rasmussrn Roy W ' illmi.r Kedin Cordon Reese William II Reid Raymond C Ri iniiard Josllll Rl INIIARDT rREIM.HIt.K Jl I US Rl ITKRIX: (Xyix! W II 1 lAM Readini. (. SCAH Z Rl MSllI R.. Arthir W ' Rfnander Al.Ll N Rl NION I U..O Reyer William L Rfynolbs NealI: Reynoids ARCFIEKC RltllAROS C.LIlfJN RujIARDSON Henry W infifid RianER CtiARi IS I- Rand Rianiji Georof Ruj,fr Rii-rrow Haroi Maxw .1 Ki : I K. Pi inv IiMi s ;mi r.i s Roberts |0R..AN I. KoHIJlTS RoYAl A Rolll RIS SoiIT RollFRIViN Arthir H Rohinson 1 Iarry W Robinson Pmiir Kyif Robinson Pun II ' Robins, IN Marshmi W Hobson (ill Bl RI I ' FRD RoDOEWK. McJsiJoii Rouu , Ro I Il ' Ui f tXARENCJi C: Rol.ERS Roland Rix.liRs Carl Rohm niierii r Roy (.. Rom Ross Root M W RoslNllllMFR WiiLivM H R- HBL . Ro W ' ll H M W ALTER Ro PaL ' L I AYIOR Rol David Rout LoL ' is Clai ' Im R ' B . Ro i Nl John M. Rowii i IIINTIY M Rl Ro W ' l Rl Graham .Alfred Ri ' HL H L RllVSELI SaMIFI W Rl ' SSLIL [iRNFST V RyaII JlMIN RydJORD Carlton |:n .iir Saeiker DONAI D Ml J1RMUJ( Sa(.K Herman Sm EN TlR MSsJ SaISMAN I ' liiiiF I «n i i R Sanimnln ri. M-l. W II I oiliSANDllRa • • • • DLZHC • • • • n 7 NVA Jp ' LL r. L. 1 II Ni.M SciiAiii lUlx 11. IIINRVSO t ARI Hkai.ii ySma 1 Iak .1 1. 1 llM.V S J R1 1 I1RI I. S J1A In  RD Will lAM S Inw ARl. I. S J11 RN Erni .sr K S 5iii r; ' ST Im. ARl. S Wii 1 lAMl SCJIU.S Karl Aigum Sjis Arn 1 John SaiMin liDW N SOIMIUI Cari ION L SaiMin Gfot .i; A SaiMini t SCAR W So IM III I I ll RllliRI I-- ScHRAIJI-R HeRIIFRT (. Nimi 111:J Arthi R I Vju llIRl Armin Hash 1. Suiri r: |- HhDI£RlCX N Sail STbDl Philip Kini.si and SaiivLLR Ai.LIMN l-tNDALU Hannay SaiTT CoRNKLius C, Scott. Jr IanC. Sco Mil : I I So Ralim ClIAS. MORRISt.N S .li|.DI-H Hamilton I ' Siaric.ht Marshall W Si ri.i ant GEORt.l: L, SlRMLl- DoNAi D !■: Shari- GtOR .L KOIII RT SlIAW L I Shaw Sherwo .d W. Shear Howard C SiiivRman William Hk.h Shearman Martin Jaml-s Smlridan Lloyd 13 Sholl Frank D Siiiit liDWARi. ( Silvers Geori.l Josliii Sii DEI EdW-ARI) G SlLIIIRNAt PaL ' l W Simonds NoRRis A. Sinclair JosEl H Ci Skirm Chari.ivs r. Skow Harry V Slater LoiiLs Byrne Slioitlj Ira SLrK:i ' Ml Carl Ali.l.si Smith Carman Uicelow Smi Dudley Chase Smi hi Earl Ei '  .I-ni- Smi mi : Smi Ci.AiRL K Smith Emmett I Smith IRI.D M Smith Harold l Smith RoniJiT Norman : kDIJ AlJlERT U Sn lll ' .IJ MI!R IIIJ.I.1RI Lami.iyn Simva Hijii.iRi H Si-.N : ArIHLIR : Sl-RT . S.J1 Si A Daniii Howard KiCJIARD V Sll I LliNNO A Sll-I.LI Eldon Stenjiim (,ijnn W Stiiii l SlliJ-1 Samuel J Sixlivan PaI ' I. -) SliNDERLAND U ' DSON C- SlTHERLAND I ii-RAi D Daim Stone SlDNI Y AL1-EKIIX.E StOI ' T KiHiARD Hardini. Stout LioYD Martin Strope I-Rl-.DERK-K SlIWART SlLHIl john ' l surriv N ' Harold J Sw an Hen Sweet J Edward Swi-leney John D. Swii-t Jamivs Sykora Ernest Henry Sciiwar: Edward G Taylor Glenn I-. 1 AYLOR I Iarold Taylor J L Taylor JosEi H Vincent Taylor Paul Soiuster Taylor Russell Eayatte Taylor , Dewey Taylor Walia.i I GlIUERT 1. lENNIS H. Petiu Termanson CiEoRf.E Dewey Theisen Cyrus C- I hieme Charles Sk.nor Tirimas. ( iiARi I--S A Thomi si.n R WiNi lELD Thompson Andrew I 1 horeson Raleigh H. Thurwachte l,OREN ThURWACHTER RODEKT I- oRREST TlLI-OTSi JOH Art : Ro I B Thonsend liRNEST TraNTIN J I RANTIN. Jr John Trai ' TMann Arthur E. Trebilcock Ormlle S. tree Joseph E. Trottman Lyle L Truax CjLis Tuckerman. Jr. Donald William Tyrrel Charles H. Ulmer Thomas Utegaard Ronald R Valier MALrRicE W. Van Arsdale Paul Stanley Van Auken Paul Van Gent Eldyn E. Van Lone Leslie W. Van Natta Eugene MorijAN Vigneron Clair Odin Vincom Eredi ric Gaihon Von Syourc ; W Randoli-h I Karl Wagnir H 1 .RR Wakeiield William W aldlriiaui DoNAi D T- Waldo Arthur Wall ROIIERI S W AILIS illiam M Walirich CiiARLE-s Walton Jami_s 1 1 Walton Wi-.siEY Walton ( JIIATER I. ' AVIPMtN WaL: Howard SiANi I Y WaniivR NE W ARD tr Jami-s Ward D W Warntr Rill IP W simi RN Warnei )oHN I IyLAND WaRRI-LN ai.swohthJ Warren 1)1 N Watson IamIvs T WATS.JN Russell (I Weaver W Ai lEK Ray Weub l.iNioN Gumore Weed W ' eeks Wi Wi Wl.NDT N. .1.1 A l M WensTEI IIar. Illius W,ll, . Arthur M W i riia Ferd E Wi rthmm Frank Lai rlnci W eston Ysi Blcj wiim Whedon HaroidP Whieler leler Syl I, Wi ID W Hin Newton D Whippll Kenneth 1redericj Arthur B. White Charles H White Donald Wii i iam Win iRVIN A WllllE Leon O W hiti Malcoum II White RiaiARD White Robert Bruc i White iRANas Whitniy JamIis Arthur W i I ' .IROloP WlEDENIlECK Joseph B W iener t TTO W lESE Lloyd L W ilder George M Wilds Robe;rt L Wiley Edwin G Williams Lloyd H. Williams Ray Evan Williams Robert Newton Williams Russell L Williams Robert Vernon Williamsi Herbert Durand Wilson Solomon Wise Clare.nci. N. Woi.E Andrew Woi lin Bl.nj, Irt ID Wrk HON La! aldDil sr Wright I Wroe SGS WuRLiiri J Wlirsti r RAIh Carrg Raliii Charles R ' auman Henry Augustus Veomans Carl Fri-.dijhcj Yol ' Ng HaroldB Ioun Rov n Yoi Ni. Wll 1 1AM MONROI . dolpii T Ol ' f .BIT PtIlJl .-% Zahorik I Ienry i; Zanim R Al.VIN Zeigi liR Edwin Zi it2 William John Zick I ' LKiai Rui .ipn Zu MiaiALi Zwkjnir Administraiion Athletics Ttie Press The ta e The Platform MiHiiiiy Co Ed.s H( m( r aiui Class Societies FtiiI imties i OK (lilies Club.s Jalire 1J JLJm B rf ' ju u if Xn (Qraiortam : DIED FOR DEMOCRACY fcOYBOGGESSSTAVER. 0« _LUaEN PORTER WEATHERBY. 12 clarence OLIVER nOCKE J. 17 HAROLD HERMAN HOLLTNG. •«• ■ ALEXANDER PURN$. • -. . FERN BRiyrou ■ ' - ' v,, FRANKUNOVnXIAMS IT o reword Ijhr urara that haue passcb ate ftllfb luith the arhicurmcnts of turn uiho haue yanc out from E ts- ronstit. Durtit all thrsr years mm ill unbrryraiiuatr Wit, stcuggltni) ani fiyihttny foe thrtr ibrals, liauc luoit aioru or suffcrcb bisajipoinl- lufiit. fflanu of them are lonu foryiotten. iUut U3tsconstn ' s Honor iBoll, coinpriseb of Her iHost fficloueb Sons, luill line foreuer! (Ehts book is built as a monument to the Spirit of ' 17 — a reincarna- tion of the Spirit of ' lil- for uihich these sons of the uniuersity ace milling to oiue their Hues. THt iiplRlI O - Ol iiccordurKC with (hr Incgl custom t.if that day, the iiirl of ' hi i« inniiiK a tri- :uturcd rosette U|xin the l rcaii uf the Vuluniect I tMuc. Jmt Ufurc hi% departure Oic uld Mam 1 fall of Ovil Mv% i piLtured in the l-mckgruuixJ From an Oil Painitnt Ihe Spirit of 17 ■ eHE c«II o( the Immortal LirK ln for Unicxi ■• answered by cver Wisconsin man of ' 61 It i% a beautiful coincidence that Wii- consin ' ft aoru aoain enter a C«rcut War for Riftht. In the very shado% of their own tribute to the great War Presulcnl CHARLES R A IIISH PitjideiM oj tlit ' , iii fjil B M OF HIi THOUCHIA FHUM UVtH JHhHI .s -•j om l Jf IIkv couI only Know bow 3 tuam of il! II I Cb« ol6 juar wouli b« qon«: but my Almj Mlaljr. l2 i onsin. will always b« lb r«. 3n pau  in lb } i4 iBam . when the ni bl i lill. J want lh ol6 Varsity. ) riam of b r: of all lb al6 socrti Ibina (3 )i oli Armorv, big and blacKagainst the sKv; wl)crc 3 firsl learned to know ll)« breech f a gun from the muzilc — : igiMsi 3. re m c ni b c r I b o o 1 6 clock on ltusic Mall. Oimo alwavs wont loo fast in s. arsitv 5 iT ' ■ ' . r nv lertr- _ i J |i S£jJ ii _,i _ g jH ■ ■yi n6 3 lcarnc6 more . V from lb« while bench above the lake, thoR from anv poetical course Ibe Kill ever ' — flave — ) iw. , ' -- ' ■ ) b! 3 ' b give an arm to sXanb up on the hill once more. an6 see picnic point trailing out into the lake! o c slarc. Ibrougb Ag Kallptllars. aiyUain Kail looming large in Wdc distance . J k. cn from Ibcsc big stone steps! :• think lb«r ' ' rin 5 in ' Y bcart forever or until a ! usy crfba crowds Ibcm out — An6 lb« iuskf cove at ' sunset seems lo be oiUins lo me — calling. until 3 ache with the longing to be back! - 1 want to see the glori- ous, copper after-glow on the stilt water, anb let the silence sink into mv verv soul — }L. want lo slroll un c Ihc willows, around Ibc Utile bcn s in Ibc X cai ' . until 3 am slccpc6 in a warm ccnlcnlmcnl ■v m 1 TTunl once more Ic sail all 6ay, with nclbing in the TTcrl but a while sail, while £lcll s. blue sKy an water, and old. kinMy pais at my side — t ' fr m- o l)er« is more sunlight on lb« Drive than in all Trance, ul it i mingled, as here, witt) sl)a6ows sl)oi ows — V :. ::nm iRl..-- . -: ' ::♦:..- ERk I ' T ft IbSKK SE — TS . a SK 1 i I ' ' ■tr- ' 1 1 s .•jj 3 l l x HP pt.- - - • E ' f- j i cr k tt i ' ' xVBV Bc ' fll H i WSmSaS t. ■ ■ , ;- tf|tiff a «i 3 can never forget V il all : Ibc smooth path. ll)« drooping sentinel trees, the quiet lake — ' -V . 3 can novcr forget the golden glorv of il: lbs sweet, ma5 voulb at ol s isconsin 1 k: n6 Ibc .jirl 3 left bo- hind me: waiting ' til 71 ccmc home a ain — ■fM ' ■ C LA S S E S iiiiMiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiti iiiiiiiiiimmiiuimiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiimi ' (Lommeiiccment Address of Welcome Class History . Class Oration . Senior Farewell Oration Class Day Exercises Monday. Jtnw l S ,J P. M. C ii i . tr Ihcalrc HlCRMAN A. ZlSr.HKE ACNliS DURRIE AND FraNK HiGSON Edward M. Livingston Sylvester L. Wheeler junior Response ... LeroyJ. Burlincame Presentation of .VIcmorial Harrv M. Bullis .Acceptance by Faculty Prof. Eugene A. Gilmore Pipe of Peace Oration Junior Acceptance Indian Dance Pipe of Peace Cerctiiony 11:30 p. M. Lower Campus William McFadden Chase Donaldson . Senior Girls The Law ' s CorLscrvation The Engineer in Buiio ' - llJucation and War (. ' otntturuciucnt I ' .xcrcises lcilncsiliiy. Iiinc 2(1 ' ):.U) . t . Slock Pavilion Marry S. Gleic k Stephen C Cribdle Paul S. Taylor iiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimii iiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiitii Pat ' )) Illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll ' Miniiiiiiiiiii liiicciiliiurciitc ll.wrciscs Siimliiy. June 17 AJdrcss— The Ihhic- of ilu- World Oimv ' by l I ki- h Bkick Class Day Miiiiiltiy. June IS 3(111 P l —CIdss Ddv and l y E. crci-ts Open Air Theatre f I i PM Mice and Men. Senior C:iass Play Orpheum Theatre 11 30 P M Pi|x- ol Peace Cxremony Lower Campus 12 00 P l— Senior Song-Fest L ' ppcr C-ampus Miitnni l)a I iicsdny. June V 10:30 to I I 30 A. M. — Annual Alumni Business Mcctin] 1 :30 P. M— Alumni Parade 2:00 to 4:00 P. M— Alumni Baseball .... 4:15 to 5:20 P. M — Sin inf; and Band Music . . 6:(X) P. M.— Annual Alumni Dinner 9 :(K) to 10:00 P. M— Alumni Reception .... 10:00 to 1:00 P. M— Alumni Ball MuMC Hall L ' ppcr Campus . L ' ppcr Campus Library Building Armory Lathrop Hall l throp Hall (jntuticnccmcnt Day Weilnesiliiy. June 2(1 8:45 A. M. — L niversity Procession L p|xr Campus 9:30 A. M. — C ' ommenccmcnt lixcrciscs Agricultural Pavilion 4:(K) P. VI. to tvOO P. M.— President ' s Reception President s House niimiiiiitii:!iitiiiiiiiiiiiiii ' IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIi Pot- iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMMiiiiiiiiin iilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllli. ..tllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMlimillllllllllllllllt: S e 71 i o 7 s -n Senior Class Officers Leroy James BuRLiNCAME PresiJent SAit, n Amelia Spensley Vice-PrcsiJcnt Howard Joseph Hancock Sfcretary-Trcasiir r BimLtNOAME Sl t.M)LKT TiMllllllllllllllllllltllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMMIillllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIillllllllMllllllllllllllllllllllir i ' a„ n iiniuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMniiiiiiiiiin .iiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiih i fllilinintDiHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIItlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllii illlMlllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllli 1 .MIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIl iiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiimiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiil: TillllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIMMIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIUmilllllllllir Miiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiininiiiiiiii nilllllilllUUIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIItlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMIIIMIlii illMMiniMllllli Pair iv iiiiiiiiiiiiiillir iJiiiriiiiiitiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiMiiuiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii. riiiiiiiilillliiiiliiiiiiiiliillliliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiMiiilliliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiililirir: Pan J9 iMHiiiiiDiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiniiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiii: 4 v ' v l , ' : 3 i : ( ;. t i- ..-T ■ sN j . Choki.i-: I.i.onari) An.MU ... .a OoMf l.ir ILKS .wo MJi;N ;ii ,Vmia. l.a C.n.-M- Normnl I. 2 IhcM Ihi; I ' l.rmiuicin i)f the Iron-Ore Deposits Near Wauk.m. I..«a (JRr.t.oR SinNKY All 1,1 K ... MiiscoJa ■■( « ■ I N(.ini,i:ris: . . wenlll Ihesis- Ihe Induencc of Local C-oupIo in the Protection i t ii Metal Irom f-orrosion by an External B M I . 1 k(.i) , i HI Ri: Walcrloun At RK.l ' l TIRP. .Mpha Zetu. Mrlwaukec Normal 1,2, , thcnac, Vice-Presi- dent ?, Picsident 4 , Aftnc Intercollegiate Debate 3 : Choral Union Thesis — A Studs of Some Characters in Cross Between Marviuis SprmK Wheat and Black Bearded Spelt (;i-;oRr,F. Bluxl Allien Madison LETTERS AND SCIENCE Sijtma Alpha l£psilon; Beloit College 1. 2. Ihesis— The Manometric l lamc Grace Marian Andersen Manistee. Mich. HOME E CONOMICS Michigan Agricultural College I . Thesis — The L.omparativc Values of Different FaLs Used tor CiKiking and the Restitution of Those Ordinarily Wasted. (.1 iFioRi) N. .Xndirson .... ScanJinavta ■Cl.ff ' NORMAL SCHITOL COURSE Stevens Point Normal 1,2; l-irst Regimental Band 4 Thesis — Recent De clopments in Radio Telegraphy and ■ Telephons HnwARD , ndi.rson Racine •■,- n, v ' MliCHANlCAL ENI.INEERINC. A s M i; Thesis — Test of a Gas I ' arm 1 ractor. r-SiiiTR I Iannaii Anderson Cambridge, III. ■■.An, y ' HOME ECONOMICS Rockford College I ; 1-uthemcs Club 2. ?, 4 Thesis— A Comparative Study of Building Codes in the L ' nitcd States; Sanitation ( ' )s(;ar Edward , ndi:r.son Taylor ■ , n.(y ' PI I ARM A V Thcsi C-.alenical Resins CilARiTS I,, Andrews Mooresloivn, X. J. ■■,An. y (1MMERCI-: 1 n.sh BasrKill, Varsits BaseNill 2. I, 4. Snrccr I. 2. 4. I lespcria Thesis— Bunking During titc ivil War nitiiitiui ' i M ' .iiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiii lillllllllllllllllllllllli: l ' „f • ' illlilllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIR uiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii MiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiinMiimiiiiiiiiiiii ' - )ur in ' i ' El i:. m 111 Ona Andkkws . . LinrKRs AND «:iENt:r PUiUovillc N..rmol I, 2. Y V C A I. 4. Secretary ..( Jutiior MalhcmudcsClub, S G A BimrJ 4 I lc l — P.iir ..f QuuJrutic l-.irinv LiLi ' BtiLLi-: Andri:ws MliJis.v ■l.ow LETTF.RS AND SCI UNCI- ThcMs— Mulhcmatic-N IhcMs C ' viurvc Gi:oRi;i- C Anindsen A c ' nfi •■;)Il LFTTERS AND SCIENCE Thtta SiiOTia Phi. rca url■r 1. President 4. KevsKme; Oistalia I, 2. I. 4. Viee-Pre-iJcnl 1, WiseonMn MaKarinc 2. Edilor-in-C:hief Shu 4. I ' niversitv Pre-o. C.luh 4. Secre- tary Yell.. Tassel IS (. ' . A H.w.rd I. S G A C.uncil 4 Thois— A Siud 111 War St..ries in Ivpicul American MaBa;incs Ironi AuRUst. h1|4. till Ja Thomas J. Ayl ard. JR Gn-cn Ba MEDICAL C.OIRSE Phi Beta Pi Thesis— The I ' atc of Sodium Cyanide m the Body Ele. nor Bernice Babcock Berlin LETTERS AND SCIENCE Smith CoUcRc 2 Thesis — C:iassilication ol (..Hiadnc Surfaces in HomoKenet us Co-orJirwtcs William I AS Carey Bahcock. I R Rensselaer. Ind. commerce Awcma. Cofnmcrcc Club J. 4; Intcr-Collcgc Wrcstlinp 3. •■1018 ■. Glee Club 1. 4. Hixisier Club I. 2. J. President 2. J ITlesis— A Constructive Classilkation of A. DcsTgninu of 1-orms l..r a Primarv KV-vator Sv iiuarters and Branch lilevatorsi •xnh Sith l.i port Market, and with Particular Reference countmn Franklin James B. con ■■ iike PHARMACY .Alpha SiKma Phr nicJi — 1 Study of the Effects of Germination Upon the Glucocidnl Content of the Seeds of the Wild Cherry L ' c unt s and stem llfead- H:al and E - to (V st Ac- Wtv London Howard Holton Baker Bake PHARMACY Kenneth E. Bahi Garv. Ind Chicai: or Re.; k Th. LETTERS AND SCIENCE i: S iriiminn Team 2. J. Captain 4; W ; : (Uiistam 4 U W C C: !).. . linK 4 I Rhode Island v J f. v - Stanley Leslie Balmer Stan COMMERCE Beta Thrta Pi. Beta Comma Sitmu. l-nur Prom - ' -• Rclatton lo S«lc Cnrnmitt nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHIIIIIIIillllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllMlllllllllllllllllllllllllllltlllllllMMilllllMIIIIIUIItllllllllllMIR I ' a,, 41 ' iiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuniiiiiiiii IIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIII! fS I j ' l imc.ii ' i;ym: lisNTA Logans fieri. InJ. Ytitch Ar.Rir.Ll.TLRE Alphu c:. il;C:i .(U isii Mi;i Bi RV BxRiiF-R .... Oshkosh l.in TF.RS AND S(;ll£NCli Oshkosh Normul 2 ThcMS — Ihc l ;vcIopmcnt of Literature ' fur Children in m KcjHLRi 1.. Baroer C iicai;o Morgan LETTERS AND SCIENCE Si(!ma Phi. Kappa Beta Phi: Artus; Skull arnl Crescent. [rcshman Baseball; Varsity Baseball 2. 1 T hesis — lire Cjmtrolled li lahlishments in Great Britain. P li LI N Hlizabliii Barker Wirlh rrccdom j r ' f I ' HOME ECONOMK S University of Colorado 2; Euthcnics: S G A Board T ' hesis — Isolation of Organij vhich Cause Salt KisinR I Iarrison ( rain Barnes . Grand Fcrk . D. ■73u.-krc ' AGRICL ' LTLRE Beta rhcra Pi; Inner Gate; Aftric Crew. 1 111 IN Mari.arei Baiiy .... Madison LELIERS AND SCIENCE V W C A Cjjmmittee 1 ; C:iass C. immillee 2 ; ' .Minneloska Cjimp r-irc 2. J. 4. [Recorder 4 Thesis — Ballad Commonplaces RoiiERf A. Baxter .... Kansas Cily. Mo. Bax . Bob aiEMICAL ENC.INEERINC. Wisconsin tinsinecr 2. 3. Circulation Manajter 4. Lieuten- ant y. Captain 4. Major . L W (. C ; LnRineers ' Min- strels I: Engineer Club 1. 2 3 4, Secretary 5. Chemical Knuincers ' Society 4. President 5. .American Society of C;hemical Ensineers. RiTii SpALDiNc. Bee( II ' dams LI-TIERS AND SCIENCE Thesis — .-XulohioRraphy in C ' hildren ' s I ' lclion in .-Nmericii. noldilllV . LICE BlE( IIEU .... Doiiie ML ' SIC (hiOmcRu.W A A . Icnnis 3. 4. Clef Clulv . Kixilal I.YNLXN Bit- MAN Alpha Law tltncRa I hcMs -Sulphide l ulp W aMc Lkiuoi P.vriu. III. Sci-nah niMIIMUIIIllliilillilllllllllllllllllMIMIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIi Pat, 4: :Ullllllllllilllliillliilllliliiiiii; .iiiiiiililiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir- l ROiMV Marion Btat . W ilU ' ughhy. () IFTTERS ANO St IFSir.R PrcMdcnt • illii Knpp Alphn Ilnrtn. Phi Bttn Kiippii. PrcMdcnt illim luvscl . Wi con-Mn Lilcrnrv Staff 2. S m rilv liditur (if BoJRcr J. Mortar Board J. Wy lytvt 2. Thoi — I route Cuilt in Hchhtl. Max Benard Belsky .... Diihiiqiic. Um i COMMERCE Beta Gamina Signrui: Commerce Club 3, PrcNidcnt 4. ThcM-s — tfniform Accounting System for GaraRes. Alice Loiise Bemis .... letters and science Chicagc Kappa Kappa Gamma Thesis — Recreation of the Immigrant in the Chicago South Park System Rov Fredrick Benkert A7onrc ••.Xiti ACRICL ' LTL ' RE . Ipha Gamma Rho; Ar Tootball 4; Ar. Mixer Commit- tee 4. Ar Litcrarv Society 1; Ski Club 3. 4 Thesis — A Companion of the Effects of the t_ pen Shed and IVirn McthoJ on WmtcrinR Dairj Cjilvcs Ada Benson Princeton, lit Benny LETTERS AND SCIENCE Lake Forest ColleRC I; W. A. A.; lixJoor Baseball 2; Out- door Baseball 2. 3: Hockey 4. Thesis — The Effect of Bodily Fatigue on Visual Acuity. Faye Oretta Bentley Madison LETTERS AND SCIENCE Thesis— The DcRradatton of Labor in American History. Llcile Harriet Berg .... Rulhvcn. loua Lulie LETTERS AND SCIENCE; Edwin Jasper Bergman Bark River, Mich Bergy AGRICULTURE Phi Sigma Kappa, Football 2. I.EiTA RLfTTi Bestow A lRM • LETTERS AND SCIENCE LawrefKC College 2. Thesis— Causes of and Remedies for ( hronic liad Spelling Ruth Laura Beyer MaJison LETTERS AND SCIENCE Baldwin WalUce r JIrgr 7 TheMs -IVr l-,-,.-h.,r,„„, mnn Maria von EbtKr-Eschn bach nlllllllMlllllllllllllllinilllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIMIIIIinilllllllMllllllllllllllllllllllli Pat ' i iMIIMIIiMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIII: I I|M V l.oi IN Hil l(.s. ( H Frfcfxirt, lit. ■Hank ' tniiMISTRY Swimminn 4 Hn MN SlDII.I. Bill, INC. s cl LKI n-RS ANl SCIIiNCE (W.kuvh Normal Hums— i:iTccl L ' non O.mmunity Life of the Stut Agriculture and Nianuul Iraininu in C ' eniral Schot ls Frank |(,icr Birch COMMF.RCF. Acacia; Beta Gamma SiRma: SiRma Delia Chi. Monas- ucs While Spades IVutscher Cluh; Fre-hman Uasketball; ar-.ilv liaskelKill 2. 4, -aWa ' Imra-mural Uaskelhall 1.2: Hadm-r SlalT I. 2. l£dnor-in-Chief of I«I8 Baducr 3; .Xs- vieiale KdnorO.mmerce Maftazine 1. 4; .AdvertismB .Man- ai;er Inion V.)dvil 4. ProKram Chairman l lo Home- cominR: i-inance Chairman l ' l|7 HomecommR; Class Se-c- rclarv 2. Philomalhia I. 2; Athletic lV.ard 4: Student Senate : Chairman Ways and Means Committee Junior Prom 3 . Director Advertisine C:iuh 4 ; Commerce Club 3.4. Thesis — [Economic Development and Colonization of Nonhern Wisconsin. Carol Biro ladison 1IOMI-; IXONOMICS lluthenics Cluh I. 2. 3. 4 Ihesis— A Study of the Diet in the Elcalxthan Pcriixi. JOHN I llRMAN I5l A( K Chicafio ' Oiy,e ' . litr-.ef (IIRVIISIRY Phi Lamlxla I ' psilnn; Student Assistant in Chemistry 4. I hcsis— Ihe Chemistry of the Keratins Ciii MAN PoRR Blaki; ... Mcrovia. Cal. COMMERCE Psi Upsilon: Inner Gate; Wisconsin MaRazinc 2. I I7 BadRcr, Awk 2, Bduin Booth; Union Vc«dvil 2 lil IZAIll 111 R: BLANt.llARD (Mrs ) . aJi.vn l.EITERS AND SClKNCli C.ioveCity CollcRe 2. Thesis — (Aimparison tif Cereal Crop in Iowa. Minnesota. Wisconsin, from 188(I-MI7 with Party Vote of Same Peri.Kl ( ' l ARA Marii lil Af ySfirmi; G ' nvn LEI I ERS AND SCIENCE Thesi — The Women in the Later l umas of Schiller. Mapai IN Bi IS.S Oiita v fa,My ' Lll lER.S AND SCIENCE I ' t lieia Pht; L ' nivcrMiy of ( iicu {o 1. 2 I hesis — Poor Kelicf LcRislution in Wisconsm. (Kid B Bi IX TurlU- lake l.i:iTICRS AND SCIENCE Anus. Hesperiu Senll-l lNlc l :l-«ilc: I ' orcnsic H mid. Secretary 4. Hconomics Gild I. Uconomics Club 4 I hesis— Wiir- ' I line AR eenlcnt l twccn LuKir and Cjipi- riilllllllliiiiilUliihilllllllllllllllllllliH iitiiillllllllllllllllllllllillliii iiilllllllllllllllMllllllllllin ifun: ...jtiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiK lii.iKN l. Bloom La Crcs.u ■Jiuly- COMMERCE Junior Pluv 1 ' yj Iho. -I ' hc CJiain Store os a Unit in McrthnnJiMOK Ul£ n C ' .lolhinK SinJ r, Fred G. Blim Monliccllc ' r. - L LETIERS AND SCIENCE ' ■■ ' ' • ' M jH WrcstlinK 2. 1 T i ' ' ' -. ThcMs— Intcrcorfxiratc Rtlalion ' . Htlwccn Banks and ijNtVir-O Railways - Newell S. Boardman ... A ' nc RUhnuTiii ■Kar LETTER.S AND Sf.lENCE . ,. Phi Kappa Psi; Varsity Track 2. 1. 4: Athletic Hoard 4 ' : •;J; l ' t ' I hcsis — Reaction of the War Lifxin Jaf anese F itreii;n . v HK r Policy ' ' -i-- tt W John ILLIAM [ioEHNE l£iansiillc, I mi ,,, ' ■ ' ' ' { r r COMMERCE f- K Oimmcrcc Cluh; Commerce laRazinc 3. Business Mi n- f ager 4 rhcsis — Gfjid and ForeiRn Exchange DurinR the War ' jH jj ' Mari H. Bollman Si. Louis, Mo. W j K -gr LETTERS AND SCIENCE JWSB ll- Dclta Gamma ; Red Domino. President 4 . ? . ' . . t- Thesis— The Foreign Policy of Kaiser William II. . V Ralph Hlitchins Bonc.ey .... DcerfidJ ■ % •Bunt Z k LETTERS AND SCIENCE ' Thesis — The Variation of the Electrical Resistance of - Water Solutions with Pressure. Helens J ARVis BowERSOX .... Bryan, O Cabby LETTERS AND St. IENCE- . Mk. Alpha Omicron Pi. Frances Shimer School 1.2; Advert is- B ing Stuff of the Daily (jirdinal 4; S C A. Board 3 , Adver- ■X , ' t singauh4 . - Thesis — Vocabular - of Browning. Ruth Boyce Oconto Falh | LETTERS AND SCIENCE Achoch. Lawrence College 1. Thesi — Ram of the Canterbury Talcs. Ruth Evelyn Boynton . ... La Crosse MEDICINE La Crosse Normal 2 Thews — Topographical .-Nnatrjmv i4A — Charles C. Brace ... ,• ,«,■ Chuck ACRICULTURE ' ' .-...- , j- IniercoiicKi- i.-itrMii }. r.i Literary Sticiety ' ic in Richland C unty. rillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMllllllllirillllllllllllMK illllMIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIMIIMIIIinillllllllll. Illllllllllllllllllllllllu rS M Ni iitMiAii 1 1 Bkaim Rn Madison N 1RMAL COURSE WhilivKiittr No VU- -C-onipi : Suf u( the Minncwila Schcxjl Svs IIaif.l I£. BRAMsr. Hutchinson, Kans. HOME ECONOMK S (In ( nc«u; Omicron Nu; Vl•llc l .y CoIIcbc I: Glee Club. and Treasurer 3. President 4; [£uthei ■ident Oiiicroh Nu 4: Keystone 4. ' Study of Food Costs and Women ' s Wages fri Seer iee llu- I 107 NDRI W I Brwn Cluh; Bai i ' v.5 arK ' r ■Andy At.RICL ' LILRI-; Alpha Gamma Rho: Scohhard and liladc. Varsity Ooss C  untry 2. 3, Varsity Baseball 2. First Lieutenant C!adet Cirps Ihcsis The Hemp Industry in Wisconsin BulU-. Stent. lositPii Patrick Bri:nnan MP.Dir.lNP. Alpha Siuma Phi Thesis — 1 poBraphieal Anatomy. RoBiiRi MiLLiiR Brewer ■ISob LETTERS A D SCIENCE Phi Delta Thela. Iron Ooss; Uutler OiltcRC I. 2; Junior Play, Ldwin Booth. Senior Play C:ommiHee. Captain in CaJel Cxirps 4; Scabbard and Blade; La Sixriedad Hi panica; Treasurer V M. C A; C mncil ol Defense Indianafotis, Ind. OoKiMH 1. Brinker XiQj ara Falls, A. V. « P h ] LEI VERS ANO SCIENCE Alpha Xi IX-lta; Wellcslcy 1 Thesis — Browning in America. limvARD Britiin ,ham l.os . ngclcs, Cal. li, ENCINEERINC. Psi Lpsilon; Kappa lieta Phi 3. 4, Skull and Ocsecnt : Yel- low Helmet. Chairman Inler-rralernily Baselsall. [- rcsh- man Baseball. Varsity Squad 2, 3. Iarold William Brock Stadtscn ELECTRIC ENC.INEERINC. Basketball 4. W; Crew I, 2. 3, Mendotu Crew Clun; Tennis Club Thesis — Hydraulic LosNCi Thrtxigh Scri Rocks and Trash Columhii. [Llh.ene Edward Brossard. |r. litith-houAe LITTERS AND S MNc E IXlla L ' psil..n. I les|xria; Mensk.ta Crew t;iub L S Oew 3 AdmmiMrulion Idilor h IN Badger Board. Inion BoanJ 2. 1. 4 I ' residinl 4 Student jinlercntc 2. Student Scniilc 4. S.phomore Semi-Publie Delsjite. Lniyersit ( ireus 2. .Assistant (hiel of Polite (Rush). Ilxisosilion. Chairman Program CAimmittcc for Junior Prnm. ' nMisi iNE Etna Brown Urbana, Ohio ■liua LETTERS AND SCIENCE I I ilctu Phi. Wyslynx: CuMnliii 1 bests — Legislation of Wiseonsin ( jmeerning the Pior. nMllliitiiihiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilllilliiiiiiillillllliMililiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiih Patt 4 ' iiiiiiiiiiMiMiiiiiiiiiiiiit; Jlllllllllllllllllllllllli: :illlllllllllllllini iillllllllllllllllllUllllllllllllllllllli: DiiROiHV Gr U ii Brown ilnullc. III. Ll-l URS AM S IliNlb K irr Kti[ r i t iintnui. Vcllc-lc I he l — t ' jiUM ul Juvenile Dclm..|ucrtv af MiUaukii- Kmhi Ri i; Warrln Browne W uu mai Sonr. , HOME EC;ONOMICS KuFpa Alpha Thctu. S «t Bnat College I. Thesis — 1 he Evcluiion ol the Chair. Mary ti. Brown Chicago LETTERS AND SCIENCE Alpha Phi. V A A. ; Badser Boaid 3. Thc5i5 — Survey of theConwnilmcntsof the Columbia Court v lail of Wisccmin Harold Joh.n Br ant La Crossi- ' Shoily ' COMMERCE Phi Kappa Psj, Cros Countr ' Ntanacer 4; Wisconsin Lil- crory Nlaga:inc Staff 1. A. Mandolin Club 2. 3. 4. Thesis — Financial Problems of the Revolutionary War. Leone Gr. ce Bryhan LancasUT LETTERS AND SCIENCE Oberlin College 2. Thesis — Shakcspcrcan Criticism in America. Arthur O. F. Blchhol: MaJison Buck mechanical ENGINEERING Theta Xi; A S M E . Treasurer 3. 4; Orchestra I. 2; Glee ■nd Ma rxlolin Clubs 2. 3. 4. Leader Mandolin Club 4: Uni- veisicy Ejiposition 1: Engineers ' Xllnstrels 2. Thesis — Poucr-Plant Test. Elsie Blckstaff Oshkosh ■Buckf letters and science Milwaukec-DoATKr 2. Thesis — Anal Ileal Study o( Thackeray ' s Women. Gertrltde Buehler Alma NORMAL COURSE La CroMc Ncrmal School 2 . SufTiofte League. Thesi. — Ruskin ' s Treatment of Nature. Bessie Margaret Buell Dclavan Bat letters AND science Alpha Xi Delta; Milton College 2: Red Domino 1, 4. Thesis — Virgil and Lucretius in FcnnyKin. Helen deYoe Buell Madison LETTERS AND StMI-.NCC Kappa Alpha Thcta. Phi Beta Kappa Th   — EiBhtcenth Ceiuury Thought u Reflected in Wor !■ worth and Akcnsidc. IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII UllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIMIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII?; Pair 47 lti:i1IIIIIIIIIIIIIMriirMIIIIII!!M!llfllllllll. I liLi N Pe kkins Blli Ook Park. III. I i-iti:ks am .S( it-.scK Alphu Bii. Swcci liriiir CU.MiKi- 2. Y V C A t oH.nct 4: Siudcm C. uniil of IXcn - Oiuntil; c:iiuirmnn Red Cross Unit Ihisi: riistorv I I I he Anunios Club. Kathi:rini. M BiNOV Hau Claire LRTTKRS AND StIRNCF. Ciimmu Phi Beta; Bradfotd Acadtmy I. Block lial riicsis— Analysis of Cxintcrr.rornry Prost W rilcrs iMor.iM Bliuii . Minncattolix. Minn. ■Imor Jton- J(1L KNAI ISM Kapra Alpha Thiia; Ihcia SiRmu Phi 1. -1; Summer Car- dinal 2, iLdRcr lioard 3: Sccrclary- I .lasuicr UnivciMty Press C;iuh 4; Secretary Iwcllth Ninht 3. 4: Jun. r Ploy 3: l-rench Plav 2 Linion Vodvil 4;Junn;t Class Oimmitlce: l-renchCluhl, 3 .... Ihesis— The Kelation of Newspaper AdvcrtisinR to its ■ News and Kdilorial Policy. Lkroy James Burlinc.a.me .... Atadison ■limly LKTTF.RS AN|- SCIKNCF. Chi Phi: Ph. Alpha Delta. Delia Sigma Rho. Iron Cross: White Spades. BadBer lioard 3; (jirdinal l-.ditorialist 4; Class President 4; MiehiKan. Illinois, Cjililornia Intercol- IcRiale Dehates 2. 3; Joint DeKite 3, lorensic a.ard 3. ■m President 4; Student Senate 4. Philomathia President 4; , t ' Hamilton (Vator 3. Winner Junior Ln 3. IntercolleKialc mV I IXhaie 4 Sophomore Semi-Public 2; Student Council of IXfJnse Winner Senior Open, U W Pinal 4; N. O L. (Valor. Ann Arlxir. 4, _ . ,. - Ihtsis—Salisded by ImercnlleRiale DcbalinK Larry Edward Blrzynski Milwaukee •Bur: ' Ml-X.HANICAL liNGINF.KR A S M U 3. 4 „ . , . , , • Ihisis— C:ompaiative Tests of t.vlinder l.ubricalion of a emi-Diesel Ungine HiiNRY HusoN Bush Plymouth ■Hank- (:ommf.rc;e ZetaPsi; Rii nColleRe2 I hesis— Scientific ManaRcment for Retail Stores. I Iarold W. Bi:zi-i-i Delavan ■liu:: FLEt.i R u:ai. i;ni .i ni;fr I N( ; i 1W ' ! 4ry ' M ' M V VJ Phi Kappa Psi t. 1 M.JiiANNlilTF. BuiLl-R . Marshall. I nd. IIOMI FCONOMK S V, - ' Western t:olleRe 2. Uulhenics ' )• ' ' DoNAi.n .Alan C aldwixl hileualer ■• Jon A ;RH I ' l-IL RI- ' ■ ' .Alpha Zela. Whilcwaicr Normal 2. Band 3,4; ARricullural i ilerarv Society .,, ,. Ihesis -1 he l-fTcct of War Prices on Wisconsin Dairy 1 arm Pn.dts Maridn (.1 IN( II t:ALKiNS ... l£fan. vilU- I FTlliRS AND S( IFNt.l; .o-B-ajii-:-: I •lhcsi -rhc Momoc IXH:liinc. i:pi!f(iiiiiiiiiillltlltllllllliilllllllllllllllllilliilMiliiilltllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllir illlllllllilltIK; l if.c 4S rJllllltlllllMIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIi iiiiiiiiiiiMiMiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiritiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiii ' - Ltovn l.LONARD CIall Marshall •Chub ELECTRICAL ENCINEERINC. Acucia. Tou Beta Pi. Elo Kappa Nu. EnRlnct ' Cluh; American Ifucilulc of Elntncal EnalnccI ThcMS — Thr Electrical Dcttclion of Sound Wjivc I ndcr Water WiiLivM J. CUmI-In A aJi.uv BUI- CHEMICAL ENGINEERING Signui Alpha Epsilon; Tau Beta Pi; Chi Gamrnu Pi; V-n- gincers ' Crew I ; Business ManaKcr Viscor sin Engineer } . 4. NIcixliita Crew Club; Civil Enginccrina Society ThcMs — Investigation of the Centrifugal f-orcc Method of Nlanufactunng CorKrete Drainage Pipe. LiciLLE E. Campbell Alpha l hi: Badger Staff 3; L ' nion Vodvil 3; Clef Club I. : 3. A: Treasurer 4; Junior Prom Committee Thesis — Piano Recital. Roger CLinoN Cantwell MEDICINE Phi Sigma Kappa; Baseball I. Thesis — Topograpihical .Anatomy. Mahlon Hlmphrey Caradine Cap, Carrie LAW AlcnrOL Cad« Lieutenant I; Captain 2. 3. 5; Athena; Vicc-Presi dent 3; Forensic Board 4. 5; Secretary 4; Treasurer 5. E. position Committees 2. Dorothy Serena Case Detroit, Mich CiMe HOME ECONOMICS Thesis — A Survey of the Hospital Dittetian. Margaret Chamberlain .... Milwaukee LETTERS ANT) SCIENCE Kappa Kappa Gamma Thesis — Religion and the Great War. Marshall H. Childs l£au Claire Mith LETTERS AND SCIENCE Helen Petrova Churchill Morxrc- LETTERS ANT) SCIENCE Delta Delta Delta . Onriain Nu 3 , l teMdcm 4 S immtng Team 2. Lmversity Dichesira 1 2. 3. 4; Clef Cluh I. 2, 3. 4. Secretar ' T. 4. Iiuthenics Qub 2. Thesis— A Chcniical .• nalys4s of the Carbohydrates of th. Navy E)can. Marion Leslie Clancy Chicagi ' LETTERS AND SCIENCE Kappa Kappa Ciamrrui I kxkcv I. 2; Track 1.2; Ba.sfcet Ball 2 Secretary Blue Dragon Thesis— lh«- I- licet ..f physical Excrcuc on Visual Acuity. 4 . ( J v l 3 ' ■. : ' A .■ if ' m ■ ' . it ,-? ■ aillllllllllllllllllMIIIIIMMIIItlllllllllllllllllllllMllllllllllllllllltlilllllllllllltllltlllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIMIII 4 Pat, 49 L ' llllllllilliL iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiuiiiiiiiir iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii nva Makii: C ' i AKKr; .... Li:niiRS ANl S(ll NtE Whitcwmcr Nortnul 2 Ihi-Mx C iutM: in Mathematics. ARKCI l.C.l ' RII.sClAKKh Al.RK I I n Rl IhcMs— Ihc IVr Cent r,l Mc.it t., Hull in Oats W htliTuaU ' r Nl.sl I ' lllM l-RI IMAN (j,ARKi; . ■■ ■• I.I:m■;R 5 and S IF.Nr.F- lircmia ChIIckc I Maru-tla. Go. Dcrivc-d fru Mary Sii :rlin . (XARKL .... York. chr. LI-. I ItRS AND SCIENCI-: Camma Phi Ucta; Bradford .Uadcmv I. Wisconsin Lit- erary MuKazinc Business Staff 3. 4: Badgct Business Staff 4 Ihesis The Relation of the Crafts to the Italian Painters of the Renaissance. I RA M ( .1 ARKI-. Madison LI :r ri-Rs and scilnce Ihesis- American Lraditions. lA liALDWAN Clow O.shkosh LECfLLRS AND SCILNCF. President Chadlv.urne Hall 4: Sixretars ORUON .Manlly C OLL (.IILMISTRV Phi LamKia Kpsilon; Llnivcrsily Orchestra 1 Marion (. ' .oh-. Chicago LKTTLRS AND SCIENCE I hesis -The P.K;lry of Muscfleld stiii:r a. Collins l-onJ Jit Lac Annie LLIIERS AND S :ll:NCE Oshkosh Normul 2; C ' jistuliu. Si-crelurv 4. President 4: ! ' resident Kcvstone I hcslM— History of the Nuvul War Cx.lleKe Nevi|sorl. R I. Ii;lln J Collins Surcm Point Jo. Cully LLi ii;rs and s ilnce jirmll C illcKc I. 2. Cjistulio. l hlicity and Mcnitscrsliip jimmillccs o( ( Ainsumcrs ' Lcjikuc 4. I jhlicity CU mmillcc SulTraKc LciiHuc 4. Oailv Cardinal 4. Ciioral Dnion I. ' . W C A . Press Cluh IhcMs — ihc Literary Aspects of the l£nRlis)i Tcxtlwoks in Wisconsin I liuh ScIxkiIs IIIIMIIIIMiiiililllMlllllllllllllllllltllllllllllllllllllllllllll .. :.. I ' att SO -_ ' IMlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltllllllllllllllllllllllMllllllllllllt -iiiiiiiKiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin; Wii I lAM Si rpiiF.N Chandler . ■thir AC.RICl LTLRE and Arri.w: Iron Cn WiiK iaiU Delia LIpMl.m. Stur und Arn.w: Iron Cross.  a kctboll. Cjjptain 1; ' drMty UuskctbnII 2. J. 4. W . Cupiuin 4: Athletic Boor J 3. V ' lCc-PrcMtjcnt 4; E rcsidcnt Junior Class; CollcHc liaskctball I: CoIIcrc Baseball 2: President W Club J; Y M. C A. Cabinet; Hospital Corps Regular Now Sarah Lois Colosimo I lurU- LETTERS and SCIENCE Italian Social Service Work. Thesis — The Ethics of LiKretiiis. Jessica B. Colvin Eransiillc. Ill LETTERS AND SCIENCE Delta Gamma Thesis — Dostor -sky s Influence on English Niivelists- Bernard Martin Conatv ■Krlly CIVIL engineer Triangle Xi ' hileualer Wi -Design of Proposed Concrete Arch to Span the 1 Street Crossing of the I. C. Track at Madison. Brooks Lawson Conley Madisc Bun electrical engineering Carroll College I ; Engineers ' Club; Instructor in Teleg- rophy Thesis — Development of a Spark S phony. of Wireless Telc- JoHN M. Connolly ELECTRICy L ENGINEERING .Mituaitkec Eta Kapp Thesis — L Valuation: elopmcnt of Unit Cost System for [ilcctrical El ' gene p. Connor Madison Cine COMMERCE Chi Psi ; Football I ; Badger Eioard J ; Freshman Dance Committee I Thesis — .Advertising and Its Relation to the Ultimate Consumer Emma Gretchen Corstvet Mtluaukec •Chub letters and science W A A ; Red Domino, Ca.stalia Thesis — Technique of the One-Act Play. UinnakredKatherineCorwin Des Moines, la LETTERS AND SCIENCE Alpha Xi Delta. Drake LIniversity I. Cardinal Staff J; Badger Board of ( jintrol ). Co-ed Cardinal 2. Business Staff). Sa ys Club ). Suaroge League 2. J. 4. Vice- President Sullrage League 4. Consumers ' League 5, 4; Publicity f jioimittce 1. Chairman Y. W. C. A. Commit- tees  . 4. Pan llellenK 2. J. 4 Thesis— Ihc l.ife of Thomos Corwin Helen D Crah. Jacksonville, III LETTERS AND SCIENCE Achoth; LiiKlen tx d. Mo . 2. Thou — The Overlapptng of Abilities of Pupils ilMlllllirilMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIMIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIilllllllttnilllllltttllltllllllllllllllllllllllMlllllllllllllllllllllllllltllllllllltllilir  i. ' MllllinillllllllllMIIIIIHMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIII!!: ' lilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllU . lii;k S. Ckau. Jancsiille AGRICULTLRIC MRmo Alpha lipsilon ; ' icc-Ct)mmodorc Crew 3 ; Cxir ■ h pi 4f ifN • . ffs 4 ■ V ' ■ I SiRmo Alpha bpsiion ; icc-C )mmodorc Crew 3 ; Ctimn lore 4: Choirmun Riccnlion 0 mmittcc 1918 Junior Pre IhcM . — C ' -omparativc Tcsl of a Case l- ' our Cylinder Mo L ' MnK Gasoline and Kcro IliLEN C. ( JUJNIN IIOMK IXONOMICS Mpha Chi Omcfw; Euthcnics Club 5. 4 Thesis — l-lfTccl of a Lactose Medium L ' p  n the Cruwth of Bacteria m Milk Iagdaliin Cromn Oconomowoc HOML KCONOMICS r.hi (ImcBa: S c; A . Secretary 3. W. A A Hoard 3. 4; (iirrespondinu Secretary 4. W A A. Pin: Small ' W, Secretary C stalta 2 , Huthenics. t re; ident 4. Thesis — Bibliography for the History of C stume. •! osAMOND Crosby . Grand Raf ids, Mich. Li:i IIiRS AND sciirxcE lpha Chi Omefta, Swimming ' I ' cam 2. Union Vodvil 3; Shakespearean 1ast.iue 2 Thesis — Anzengruber. THRRINF. Cui.VF.R Milwaukee Ll, 1 lERS AND SCIENCE Mortar Hoard: Kcvstonc: University of ChicaRo I: W A A Board : ' W : Woman ' s Page, Dailv Cardinal 2.3: Trea urer Barnard Hall 3 Thesis —Miction Since 1 )14 as Influenced by the European Iili-nCa MMiNt; Miluaukee HOME ECONOMICS Kappa Alpha ' I ' hcta: Milwaukee-Downer 1 ; Mortar Board: Vice-President S G A Thesis— The Kole of Milk in the Present W ar oBERT J. Cunningham .... Janesville ■i3oir LAW i ' hi Delta Phi: Jubilee Medal: Harris Political Science l ri:e, Brvan Political Science Pri:e. A B. Degree 1P16 .,1 Wiscnsin I hisis— A Proposed Revision of Courts in Wisconsin Miiiii R I Dahlman Shelvyfan (MIMICAL INt.lNI.I RINC, Thesis— Methixl for .Making Tests of rillers for W.«xJ BliKk Pavements. MMA nAMKOi:MLER MlluiUlkee Petcf LETIERS AND SCIENt E Milwaukee Normal 2; S G A Board 4. ■ W C. A Coun- cil 4: Hockey leum 3, 4: lnd.xjr Baseball 3: Tennis 3 , Sec- retory W. A. A. 4. ' i:ane Oasis Ihihith, Minn. ACRICILILRE .Alpha tiumntii Kho: .Mpha Zctn. Wi%consin Union Ikiard 4. Agriculture Lit Mag 4: Glee C:luh 4. Junior Class Play. Wisctinsin Otuntry Miignzmc 4 Thesis Agriculture T ' corvjmics. Miitiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ;iiiiiiiillMI|lllllllllllllillllllllliii iiiitiillllllllllllllllllllllllllllir; TaT} iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiii: Helen M. Davis Dclaian HOME ECONOMiaS Gatnnui Phi Beta: Women ' s War Work Council 4; Chair- man Rcftulatton of Stmlcnc Activities Committee; Presi- dent Pun l-lellcnic ?. 4; liuthenics Club. Vice-President. 1: Wvslvnx Thesis — lilTect of the War on the Curricula and Commis- sary Departments of Institutions of Higher Learning: A Study. Marion Lucille Dawson La Crosse LETTERS AND Sf.lENCE Keystone 4: La Crosse Normal 2; Red Domino 3. 4; Junior Ex ; C stalia J. 4. President 4: Edwin Booth-Red Domino Play 3; SufTrage League ?, 4: Consumers ' League 3. 4. Thesis — The NIorphology of Soil Molds. Charles Edwin Dennis. Jr. . . Ballimorf, Md. ' Denny CIVIL ENGINEERING Triangle: Baltimore Poly Ins I : First Regimental Band 4. Thesis — Design of a Steel Arch Highway Bridge. Henry W. Desebrock Miluaukee Da.jv ' AGRICULTURE Glee Club. Margaret F. Deutsch Milwaukee Muxsy , Dutch LETTERS AND SCIENCE GermanistischcCesellschaft 1.2. 3: Mathematics Club 2, 3. Thesis — Mathematics Thesis Course. Mary Catherine Dick Marshfu! LETTERS AND SCIENCE Pythia I. 2. 3. 4; Sophomore Honor: Helena, Mont. Thesis — Cicero ' s Personality. Dorothy W. Dickerson D« HOME economk:s Alpha Phi; W. A. A ; Badger Board 3. Thesis — The Work of the Consumers ' League Since 1912. Otto P. Diederich Gamma Tau Beta: Sig aWa ; Mandolin Clul Thesis — X-Ray. AftMe MEDICINE ma Gamma: Gy R Dodo v .i ' Bon letters and SCIENCE a Phi Beta; Northland College 1; CIci ( lub. Uiu Mary Louise Doherty illtamsburg, lou u .-«- JOURNALISM Scoops ( .lub. S Ci A [)oard. Junior Prom Committee 3. Sufi rage League Thcsi — ppc ition Newspapers in l iladelphia frtHn 17W-18IO TiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiininiiuiiiiMMiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiin ilUIMIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIilMIIIIIIIH Howard B OoKii .Stamford, Conn. Hcuic ' . -I-hike ' a(-rk;ilil RE Ihcta Delia Chi. CivmnaMum Team I. Cadet ScrRcunt 1. 2. Hapti l StuJint Alliance I AilLv LuciLLK Donaldson .... Racine I.F.TTF.R.S AND SCIENCK I lltMS— Rifircncc- to Mumc in the Works of Robert Brown- I ' ■! anchf. M. DoRAN Belvidere, III. LinrURS AND SCltNCl-: Hiesis — Thomas M lilavard as Minister to EnglanJ. A U.I. I am E. Dormf-YF.r Chicago ■Biir LETTERS AND SCIENCE I hcta Chi Iliesis — Some Statistical Criticisms of the U. S. B. A. Year Book. RLL liLlZAUF.ill I R.u.c.s .... Fcnnimore musical SUPERVISOR Choral Union I. 2 ITiesis— Public School Music. millls OtiDEN Driver Racine Keg MEDICINE I ;amma 1 au Beta, [■reshman l «)tball; Glee Club 1 , 2. J 1 hesis— The .Absorption of t ' oieiptn Proteins Thru the Mucous Membrane of the Intestine t RLL Frank 1?)row Tomah COMMERCE Phi Siftma Kappa; Commerce Club; Treasurer Advertis- init Club 4. Thesis — Retail AdvertisinR of Hardware. I I MEL Sturi.es Di ' MMER Chicago •7 u py•■ l.F ITERS AND SCIENCE Mortar Board: Keystone 4: Blue Dragon, President; I lixkcy 2. ). 4. BaskctKill 2: Baselsall 2. 3: Red Domino. Thesis— I he Gcrnuin Philosophy Which lias Resulted in I Grait War ' IvRiAN Dl ' nnei TE . Grand Rat id. :. Mich. LEI lERS AND St;iENCi; I ' KIIR Smiim DviR Di .Sot Al.RICULU ' RE Ihcsis— A Study of Sterility. Alxirtion. PeritiJ of Gcstn- iion. and Dispi sttiiin of C ittlc in the I ' mvcrsily of Wls- t-onsin Dairy I Icrd. ItlillMiillilllllllllllllUllllltlMIIIIIIMIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIItllllllllllllli ' Itlllltllllllllltlt- ' IllllllllltlilllllllMIIIIMMIMIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIII ' . Hklen Oriss. Eaton Madison LETTERS AND StMKNC.E Choral I ' nKMi I. ; Clerman Cluh }. 4 ThrM — ITic IVihlcim of Thcodor Slorm. RuilARIi II. Ede C llVa ' . Dick LETTERS AND SCIENCE SiRma Nu; dec and Mandolin Club . 4; LcuJcr Man- dolin Club 4. Wh.tcwalcr Normal 2 Thesii — Solubility of Lead Sulphjlc in the Acetates. Everett C ' arlyle Edwards ■ shland Shorly . Ed LETTERS AND SCIENCE Zcta Psi; Carroll College 2; Gym Team 4; Edwin Bot th; Hespcno Thesis — CVrformation of Surface Deposits. W. Donaldson Edwards .... Xi-w Yorl ■fJon LETTERS and SCIENCE Alpha Delta Phi; Harcsfoot 2. J; Haresfoot Club 3. 4; Glee Club 3; Prom Dixoralion Committee 3. Ned R. Ellis LancasUr AGRICULTURE Theta Chi: Alpha Chi Sigma: Alpha Zeta; Phi Lambda L ' psilon. Forensic E3oard 3: Agricultural Literary Society. Thesis — ltcroanalysis of the Blood of Polyneuritic Ani- mals. Ben Louis Ellman Madison COMMERCE Athcnac, President 4. Junior ( Ipen Oratorical Ctjntest. Wiruwr 3 . Mcnorah . President University Zionist Sjcietv 3. 4. .Anna Mason Ely Madison LETTERS AND SCIENCE Frances Mildred Encer C iicaj;. HOME ECONOMICS Kappa Kappa Gamma, U ' ynslynx: Glee Club I, 2:3, Eu- thaiKs Oub Thesis — Histon, ' of the Glove Industrv in the United States; and the EfTeci of War Upon Inaustry. Emma .Alvina England (Mrs.) . Prainc dii Chui HOME ECONC «ICS Euthcnics 4, S G A fVierd 3. 4 Thei — Rc-education of the Ulinded Soldier. Frank J. Entrop Racin. COMMERCE ii g ' ' ' • ' ' ' ' ) sH [ -r T yih Di fl n ' riinillHIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIinHHIIIIIinillllllllllllllMlinillllllMMHIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIinillMHiMIIMIIHMinillllllHMmilMIIMlr Pat ' « ' tItlllllllllllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIHIMIIIIIIIIII .iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii: Ariiur a Erdmann SheboyRan COMMFRCF. Tia Tau; 0 mmcrcc Club; C ailroad Sccuritti . (il-RIRUDE WiNIFRUD ErK KSON Evanston, III. Li-:i irrs and science Delta Gamma, Vice-President 3. President 4; Keystone 4. President SuHfruKe League 4: I- ' orum 4. Thesis — Municipal H( spital Administration. Rav Sanford I£rlanoson . . . w ausat ■Katly- l.[;rTF;RS and StlENCF Acacia; Delta Sinma Rho; Iron Ooss; River Falls Normal 1. 2; Philomathia 5. 4. President 4; Political Science Club 3. 4; Y M C. A Cabinet 4; Wisconsin Polity Club 3: Edi- torialist Daily Cardinal 4; Wisconiin-Minnesota Debate 3; . Wisconsin-NiichiBan Debate 4; Student Council of De- fense Thesis— British ( abinet Government as Affected by the Marjory Einvrf Oregon. III. LETTERS and SCIENCE Gamma Phi Beta: Lake Forest College. 1. 2. French Club Jessie Marion Evans .■ lma LETTERS AND SCIENCE Delta Delta Delta: W A A ; Basketball I. 2; Hockey I. 2; Baseball 1.2; Badger Board 3; Castalia; Choral Union I : Y V C A Thesis— A Stud of the Poetry of Mascficld. Iar(.arit M. Evans LE iters AND SCIENCE Thesis— Enwlish Translations of Danish Ballads. Nor I ON J . EvERSOLL MEDICINE Alpha Sigma Tau; Sigmn Sigma: Phi Beta Pi; Harcsfoot Play 3; ■Follies ' 4; Glee Club 3; Philomathia 2: Sopho- more Honors. Thesis — Topographical Anatomy. Oavid E. Fahlherg CHEMICAL ENGINEERING .Mpha Chi Sigma: Phi Lambda Upsilon. Thesis — Fixation of Nitrogen. I. (HIS Fauerbach, Jr. ■7..UI ' MEDICINE Delta Tau Delta, Ro.sA Felsiier LETTERS AND SCIENCE Menorah Society 3. Thesis — Lucretius on Primitive Man. .Madison tIMIIIlllllllllllHllillllllllllllll lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMllll iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir: jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir- JosEPHiNE Ferguson Madison LETTERS AND SCIENCE Kappa Kappa Gamma; Mvstic Circle. Thesis— l xir Relief Legislation in Wisconii Dorothy Catherine Findorki- HOME economics Madison Alpha Chi Omego: Euthenics Club Thesis — Ciimparison of the Use of Ploin Agar and Nuirient Agar in Making Milk Plates Emil E. Fisner Dodge agriculture BerniceFit:cibbon Waunake letters axd science W A A : Baseball 2. Track 1. Thesis — N lodcm I nsh Comedy. Gertrude Fitzgerald WVil Xeirlon. Mass. ■Fiizit letters and science Alpha Xi Delta; Wellcslev College I; Swimming Team 2. 3;Hocke 3; W A A Thesis— The Fictional Interest of Kipling ' s Short Stones. Marion Edith Fleming Eau Claire letters and science Universitv of Chicago I ; Clef Club 2.3.4; Glee Club 3. 4. Thesis — A Handicraft Course of Study for the Grades. Mary Florence Fleming Shiillsburg letters and science Girls ' Glee Club 1. 2. 3. 4, r ythia 4. Anne C. Foley Manson, loua home economics Saint Claire College 1, 2. Thesis — The Hcut Resistance of Certain Organi RefercrKe to Canning. Marios Ford Hartford, Ky. agriculture Victor Edward Forseth Martcit Vic course for normal school graduates River Falls Normal 1. 2 ' - |y € ' J ' , 1 ■ 1? i ' % k i ' r niiiiiliiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiliillliiliiiili iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilllllliiiiiiliiilllillllllllliilililllllllllliiiitllullllliliilliullUiiiiMiiiiiiilli: ; a r t- ' iiiiiitiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiii :iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Marion Am LMtiii Fox Cornill ■ FoTie ' LI- TTFRS AN!D W.IENCE Chi OmcBu: Milwuukc .-t wncr CoIIcrc I. 2 ThtM-,— Child l bor in War Iinics SrEPnrN P. Fox Racine LETTERS AND SCII-NCE Delta lau Delta; Whiti- Spades; Swimminu 1,2. . Car- tain 4. W : Class I ' rcasurcr  . SpnnK Sprcc 2: Tradi- tion Commutes 2, Dance 0 mmittee I; Rush (Committee 4. Circus 3; Student Senate 4. Captain Student I ' olice 4; i ' resident C S A. 4. HomecominR Committee 4; C ' hair- ■nan Judiciarv Committee Student Senate; I ' inance Com- nittee 4. ' W ' Club, I hesis — O ' mparison of State Rettulatorv IVkJics in Public I tihties with Special Renard to Their LeRul Jurisjiction MAR(;ARr.T Alexis Fr. ser Burlin ;lon LETTERS AND SCIENCE lielta (lamma; Rc-d Domino; AV. Red Gauntlet. Presi- dent; W A A [ioard; Junior Play. Union Vodvil 4 Thesis — Hducational Value of Dancing Among Greeks as IX ' picted by Plato. Compared With Those of Today. k IHL ' R FrEDRICKSEN Milwaukee ■Frn Jv MECHANIC Al ENCINEERINC. Siftma Nu; Swimming Team 2. Haresfot t 3; A. S. M E I hesis — Ctimparativc Test and Study of the Twelve Cy inder Wisconsin Aviation Motor. l I ' ll Friess •■Fr«.- r. ■ Trrzclnu CHEMISTRY rhcta Chi; Alpha Chi Sigma. Phi Lambda L ' psil sCjtalvt sition of Potassium Chlorate I RED J. FUEHRING ; Sopho- hc Decompo- Eiansville. Ind. ■■;• ■(;■■ LETTERS AND SCIENCE l- lmhurst CollcKC I. 2. 3 ITiesis— Xhc Child in Modern German Lyri ■RrnERicK William Fuhrmann ■■Fr,u commerce I hela ( hi. ( ' ...mmerce Crew 2. Class Ciinir : tU.mmerce Club 4. Advenisinu Club 4 I hesis -A Discussion and Analysis of Stor 1 SuKKCsted System for Whi.lesjile HiHJses i ' WARDtlASriNGSFuiLLER Dubuque, Iowa Maulen W.v t ELECTRICAL ENt.lM.IRINi; River Prills Normal I ; LnRincer hiu Heta Pi. Rr horal Union 4. I hesis —A Study in RefriRcralion. Anni; Mari.L ' ERITE Fuli.erton . . letters and science Jane. , .lie noRorilvJ. FuLLERroN W ' ashmglon Court I Icuxe. O. LETTERS AND SCIEN ;E illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllHIIMinilMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIr iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilliiliiililiiiliiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMlllilllliillllllitiiiir. Eduii Fi ' Liz W ii ii u. Klin. ' .. •• •• HOME ECONOMICS Western CollcKC I: Track Team 2; Pre idcnt Kulhenics C ' lub 4; Secrcliirv Afiriculturc AsMKiution 4; Kcvslonc 4, Thesis— The l-ldetts of Mi.isturc on ArtiliciQl Silk f-RANK Joseph Fl ' nke I. a Crosse COMMERCE [•hi Koppu 1 1 ; Kuprui Beta Phi- Vcllovi llilmct; Assfc.t- ant Footnnll Manacer 1, Thesis — Taxation During the Civil War. Julian Sevmour Gallentine Morrison. III. Jult AGRICULTURE Glenn Lion Gardiner Eitgcrlon LETTERS and SCIENCE Varsit - Football 3. 4: College Crews I. 2; Varsity Wrest- linn Team 2. ). W . 4; First Lieutenant R O T C ; Atncnae 1.2; Student ConfcrcrKC I : Y. M. C A. Cabinet 4 Thesis — The Effect of the Tobacco Warehouse L ' pon S - cial Morality. Leona Mae Garrow MaJison ■Leo HOME ECONOMICS Choral Union 3; S. C A. Board 3; Kuthcnics Club 4 Thesis — A Study of the Relation of Education to WaRcs of Working Women in the Stitching Trades in Wisconsin: Based on Statistics Gathered by the State Industrial Commission. Harold M Gasser Platuiillc ■Pttt COMMERCE Ptallcvillc Normal I. 2. Thesis — Development arxl Future I rospects of Duluth as a Grain arxl Steel Market Lloyd Emerson Gasser ... ' ... Plain AGRICULTURE John Ferdinand Gates Racine Hannts MEDICINE ClaM Crew I; Coljcgc Crew 2; College Football 4. Mcn- tloca Boot Quh Thcau — Topographical Anatnoiy. Kathryn Marie Geii.er Monroe LETTERS and SCIENCE l hi Beta Kappo. Sophomtirc hlonors. Thcstt — Course in Mathematics E.MILY Gertrude Germer Chicago- LETTERS and SCIENCE Gamma Phi Beta. Thesis— Oucaip and Its Railroad Traruportution iilMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIMIIIIIIIItlllMllllllllllllllllllllinilltlllllinillMMMIIIIIIIIIIItllllMllllllllr Pat, S9 iiHiiiMiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiinii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii: .. ' a i .V . ; r 1 n y nnii- Li CJinLiiY . . . orlh Dartmouth. Mass. l.ETTKKS ANT) SCrENCE Ihcsis— John MascfiiM unJ 1 lis Literary Relationships. siiiER i GiiiDKO Racine ■■J ' lr HOME economk:s ITlcsis— A Studv of the Marketing fx)nJitions of Perish- able t.o )Js in Madivin A II.IJAM SVDNOK CjILHREAIII. Jr. . Detroit SyJ- LEITERS AND SCIENCE Siuma ( hi; .Xrtus. Skull and Crescent; Yellow Helmet: Badcer IVwrd J; llaresfoot C:luh 2. Treasurer 3. President 4 I nion k)viI 4; Sophomore Honors; Chairman Hopie- cominn Ball 3 Ihesis llie Imancial Historv of the War of 1812. the Si anish-Ameruan War. and the Me.Mcan War KOBERT L. GiLMAN Oshkosh Sirelch MEDICINE Gamma Tau Beta; Oshkosh Normal I, 2; Glee Club 3; R O T C 3 rhcsis — A Study of the lilTects of Concentration of Cer- tain Tcxic Gases. losiPll A. GiTiEN .... Port ashmglon •7« PHARMACY Thesis — Sublimal ion I ARi Staunion Gi.ovER Crau ordsville LETTERS AND SCIENCE W A. A ; Hockey 2; Baseball 3, Indoor Baseball 2. 3. 4; Varsity 3 ; Athletic Board 4 ; President of (.XjtinR Club 4. Khesis— Women of Lsypt from 300 B C to ?00 A D I RANK Demmer Golden .... Aurora, III. fiem COMMERCE Phi SiKma Kappa. Star and -Arrow; White Spades; Track I. 2. 3. 4; Croys Country 1. 2. 3. 4. Captain 4; .Athletic B iard 4 ' I ' hesis — Industrial Conscription I loRis M. GooDLAND Oshkosh LETTERS AND SCIENCE Oshkosh Normal 1.2. Thesis — William Dean Howell ' s Characteri:ation. Marvin Clieiord Goul .... Brodhead Afarp COMMERCE Alplia Sigma Tuu; Beta Gamma Sigma; I- iars. Commerce Club Thesis — Pay Roll Systems: ' I he lime Rccorxi and Distri- bution ol on Industriul, u Commercial, and a l btic Utility. M I 1 AM 1. tiRAMS V ' u(iT(i ' ll71 ■liur A(.;RlcrLTlRI-. i=lMl,i iiMlilillutuilltllllllllllllllllllllilllllliltllllllllltlllllllltllMIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIiiHi I ' af to iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin ::i||lllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllili nuiihii lit: Richard Fischer Graner .... Peoria, lit. Dick LETTERS AND SCIENCE BruJIcy f ilytcchnjc Institute 1 2. Thesis — blcctric Railway Rate Theories: Their StKial and licorK mic Significance. Edward Collins Gratiot .... Shullsburg TeJ ACRICIILTURE Phi Sigma Kappa; Alpha Comma Rho. Thesis — Corn Bell Rations for Fattening Beef. Florence B. Gr. venbrock . . . Fennimorc Grary MLSIC supervisor Choral Union 1.2. Jessie Lolmse Green .... Ligonier, InJ. Jay LETTERS AND SCIENCE .Alpha Chi Omega; Union Vodvil 3 ; Suffrage Club; Western College I. Thesis — The Settlement of Northern Indiana. Walter Green Milwaukee ■Cy- MEDICINE Phi Beta Pi Thesis — Topographical Anatomy. Marjorie Griesser Peoria. III. LETTERS AND SCIENCE Chi Omega; Rockford College I. 2. Thesis— The Labor Market in the United States Harlan G. Groffman Manitowoc Croff PHrVRMACV Delta Phi Epsilon. Thesis — Animal Charcoal. John Gross, Jr Madison Jack LAW Phi Alpha Delta; Delta Sigma Rho; Beloit Cxillcgc B A. Reynold C Grosser Chica ;. ' Dad LETTERS AND SCIENCE Cross Country, Captain I ; Track 1.2. Wisconsin lingincer I. Badger Board I. 2, 1. Art Editor 2. 3; Daily Cardinal 3. V ' ice-PrcMdent Board of Control 4. Assistant Manager Junior Play J, Circus 2. Uni.m Vodvil 3; Junior I rom A x Chairinan 3 . Econt mics Guild 3. 4. Homecoming 3; Scoops Club 3. Y. .Vl C A Cjibinet 4; Student Senate 4; White Henry H. Gi .mprecht . . Rice Lak, Cummie enc;ineerinc Triangle; Civil Engineer ' s Society Thesis — InvcstioDtion for a Proposed Water Power 1 ■ opment on the Oconto River at Oconto. Wis. ;illllllllllllllllliliiillllllllllllllltliillliiilllilllilllllllliiiillllllllllllllllliiii: Pat ' 6 iiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiin IMIIIIMIIMMIIIIIinillllllMHIIIIIIirilllli iiiiiiiiiiiiiii; ( ir SAR Gl NOKBSKN La Crosse m ' liii-.. Gun MIOICINt iklii rhcto Pi: Mi-dical l i-irvc ( ...rps. U S Armv; l-r.ig- Mcr I louri- Almcn Skolcn, Chrisuuna. Norway I, 2 I hcMs — rill- Slnmacli as Sicn by iht Kocnlncn Ray : ,1 Rl) B CjI snrRSi.N La Cr Iklj Ihcln Pi Vfcdicnl Rcmtvc C. )rps. L ' S Am- I roKtiur I l.iurc Almcn Skulcn. Chnsliana. N ' orwav I. 2 I hi-is— I he Siomach as Stin In ihi- RiK-ntRcn Ray 1 N PaI I Ck I I MANN Ki-lllWrsVlllc 111 iiRs AND .S(.ii;n(.i-:. mldk ini; au Kappa l Lpsilon; WrcslJinR Squad 3, 4; McJic P ot- I hcMs — 1 uix)graphjcal Ai and X-Ray VV)rk. KllUnl: HaI SSLKR . COMMERCi; I hc -iN — C .orri--pt)ndcncc Sujx-tvision I.I N I Iaesslkr Aliluatikiv Mittiaukcc Alituaiikci; COMMERCE ' si ndcncc Supt-rviMon 1 ni[. Loi im; 1 Iaessler HOME Et:ONOVIICS Milwaukee Noimal I. 2 I hcsis— Edett of Reduced OxyRcn Icn- I ' holoRy of Bacteria 111 OKI D IsAHlL I lu.ERTY .... KnU 5 ) Frosh HOME ECONOMICS I ulhenics Club; Mlnneto ka Camp I ' ire. S G A Board, ■i W C A I heM — The Development of Modern CAmveniences in ' W ARll almore Halueri Chicago LETTERS AND SCIENCE i iin 1 1 1m I .S ' i(( i Kcik ciiiimu I MM I l-,( (1NOMICS I ' lver I alls Stale Normal I. 2 I liCM?. — I ' he Mat Industry in the I hilippines and ShjiIi I II 1 IAN I Im I Y A u.yi.(..( I M R.S AND SCIENCE II ' ' ' IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIItllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIMIIIMIIIIIIIIIIi Pat ' 62 Jllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll IIIIIIIMIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIMIIIL- Glin W. I Ialjk La Crcsi LF.I Tt-RS ANn SI IliNCIi La C ' rovMT Stiite Nurmnl I. 2. I ' nivcrMlv OrchcMrii 4, 1 hcM — I he l-ITccuvc l.cnmh nf a Rotiniilinis I uK- Anna SiMULit Halsor V l-orcst Ann LETTERS AND SCIENCE ThoMs— dinks tiallad Ihconcs Alma Nevell Halverson letters and science loNE EsrELUv Halverson .... ItJiminJ LETTERS AND SCIENCE Plattcvillc Normal 1, 2 Thesis — Contemporary- CnticiMn of Wordsworth. Edwin .A. Ham.men Chicago MINING ENGINEERING Kappa Sinma; .Mpha Zeta; Coloratki ScKxil of Mines 1; Frush Tootball; Winner of Intra-mural Tennis 2 Class l-oothall ); Auric I ' oothall 3. Junior Baskethall: Varsity Football S.]uaJ 4. Louise Hammon Evanston. III. LETTERS AND SCIENCE Northwestern. 1.2: Swimming Team 3; W. A A. Thesis — Bret Harte as an Interpreter of Pioneer California. Howard J. Hancock Shultshurg Han AGRICULTURE Delta Phi lipsilon: Iron Cross; White Spades. Frosh F ' oot- hall; Varsilv F ...thall 2. J. 4. W . Captain 4. Soph Base- hall; intra-mural Baseball 2; Secretary ' and Treasurer of Class 4. Athklic Bt«ird4. Reba Cordelia Haner . . Ktttr HOME ECONOMICS Sun Prairie I Ssiuad 1 . Glee Club 1.2. Sophomore tJan.- tee. Euthcnics. Y; W C . . lh«sis — Some F ' actors Influencing (- ' crmcntalK Yeasts Mary Lois Hanlev Milwaukee LETTERS AND SCIENCE Thou — Browmns ' i Pompilia. Alma Christine Hanson . . . . letters and science Pi Beta Phi Thratj — Oiccn M h and Shelley the Y ' outh Eau Claire niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir- ilMIIIIIHIIIIIIMIIIIIItlllllllllilllllllllllllM iiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilllliiiniiiiiilllllli: loiiN Alhi.ki Hanson ' ausau CUF.MISTRY I ouis Hanson Marinette LF.TTl-.RS AND SCIENCE Member of Medical Rcitrvc Corps; Student Assistant in A IM P. Hanson Michigan, .V. D. LETTERS AND S ;1ENCE Phi Alpha Delta. I5and I, 2. J. -4; Orchestra 2. 3; Glee W inclwslfr, Ind. Ilaniia Marie Hardman Sktel ' LETTERS AND SCIENCE Alpha Chi OmcRa; Northwestern University 12; Orches- tra 3. 4; Washington Club; Consumers ' League. Thesis— Hie Works of Gcorsc William Curtis. IaNNAH 1 RL l.SDALE HARRINGTON . Rock Crt ' ck, O. LETTERS AND SCIENCE Pi Beta Phi , Lake Erie College 1.2. Thesis — Proptjrtional Representation as a System of Vot- ing for Municipalities. ARL Q. 1 IaRRIS Chicago Q. Ktimhar ACRICLILTL ' RE Alpha Zeta; I laresfoot C ' lub 2; Junior Play Commit Junior Play; Senior Play Committee. Thesis — Feeding Experiments in Swine Production. Irene Eleanor Har I Ctimhcrt COMMERCE La Crosse Normal. I ; Women ' s Commerce Club. ' i President ■ ; Advertising Club. Maude L. C(5AOMAN Hariman . . KilKni LETTERS AND SCIENCE Alpha Xi Delta. ' I hesis — The Influence of Salt Upon the Pioneer Settle ments. IIdna Gerirude Hartman .... Madison liilJa ' LETTERS AND SCIENCE Wahzhedn Camp l- ' ire. Thesis — The IX-vclopmcnt of the .Archcgonc of Sphacro- cari s l jnnelli. Kl( HARD INSOR I IaRIWELL Dick a(;ri :1 ' LURe Thesis— The Wax Moth. (.Jollcria.Melonilla. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir. ■u r 64 IIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIItlMMIIIIinilllllllllllllllllllltlllllltlllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIliU Clarenci; N. B Hatlkbero . . Hal MEDICAL COITRSE Modu- Alpha Gamma Rho: Alpha Chi Sigma; Phi Lamt-J i Upsilon: V W C. C. 1. Lieutenant 2 TncMs — Autolysis of Muscle Tissue Carl Frederick Hayden . . . . •CarV CHEMICAL ENGINEERING Miliiaiikct Lambda L ' psilon. Thesis — Recovery of Valuable Distillates from Norway Pine Stumps. James J. Hayden MarshJiM ■Pat NORMAL SCHOOL COURSE JoANN R. Hayes Janesi ' ille Johnny HOME ECONOMICS Pi Beta Phi: Rockford College I. Thesis— The Effect of Infant Welfare Work on Infant Mortality. Martha Healey Webster Groves, Mo. HOME ECONOMICS Pi Beta Phi: Class Hockev Team I. 2, 3: Class Basket- ball 2, J: Varsity Hockev 3 : W. A A. Thesis — The Problem of Inexpensive Housing. Leo Pall Heitt . Vit Glanis MEDICINE Gamma Tau Beta; Carroll College I, 2. Thesis — The Absorption of a Foreign Protein Thru the tucosa of the Intestine. Harry Richard Heintzen . M ilwauki-e electrical encineerinj Eta Kappa Nu. Track 2. 4. W . Captain 4; Swimming I: 1918 Badger Board Thesis — The SyrKhrcinous Commutating Rectifier. Esther Helen Heisig Madison HOME economics Omicron Nu; Euthentcs Club. Thesis — The Acidity of Various Syrups. Dorothy . ' . Helmes Si. Paul, Minn. Dolly letters and science Thesis — The Early History of the City of St. Paul. .Marjory Everett Hendricks journalism Madison MN-nc irOc. L niversitv ■I .nu Club ; 2 W IS. Kti .rtcr ,ni r.Jitor n,ti,, ( h.nrrii.in SkiiiI • c 4; S C, A C Hincil 4. 1. AdvcrtiMng ( lub 4 iii-Ordcf Advcrtisinu and : ■ rillllllllllllMMtllltllllllllMIMIIMIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIililllllllllllllllllli 5 Pa,, 6S iiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiilllliiiiiMniiiiiiiii Mlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli:: 4 ( lAKiNii I. I Iim kii;ks n ACRK L ' LIllR AInha Zilu IhcMs-A Stud ..( ihc c:c Iricsmn UricJ -Ar v . Siro ..f the HoKlc « ' % ( ' aRLL-TON I llNNIM.sr-.N CHIiMlSlRV AlphiiChi SiKilla I Iarold 1 Iiskman l-vansiitli-. InJ LI TTURS ANO SCIKNCK Delia lau IXka Amanda ( Missman .MaJison A unJy, Smiles- LEiTTIiRS AND SCIENCE l vthia J, 4: Glee Cluh I. 2. Second Orchestra 4. (■.hi ral Unum 5. 4 I hesis— UoM.m and the Revolution. PiiMii- |i nN HicKEY . CUrflanJ. IXick. Souf CHEMISTRY I rciLLi: Carolyn Hii:«er MLSIC C.horai LJnion IhcMS— A Cour-.c .,f Study (or Puhlic Schi«)l Mum C ' aihirini. Romana Hicgins I ' tnKy LETTERS AND SCIENCE I he-i I he I laliit of Karlh«ormi I ' rances Ll ' creiia Hill Ashland LEI TERS AND SCIENCE Hcloit aillcRC 1. 2; Voh:hcdo Camp I ' lrc 1, 4. II. Cluh 4 Ihe-is— 1 he NcKfo ProWcm in licloit, W isconsin ... CIioRt.i; Alheri I In l V vivi ' nii ■• ; .A ■• i:oMMER( i: (:..mmcrccCluh4 1 hcMs -ActtiuntmR Systems ItlllN 1 ll l.ll 1 III 1 W ' wvcnu Al.RK L ' LIIIRE rhcs( — Ihc l-JTctt ot Sioraiic Ciindition ttutivc l jwcr ol Dynamite , r, . 1 the llx- -illtllllllllltlllllllllil: .iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin iUlllllllllllllllllllllinilMIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIM iiilllliiHIIIIIIIIillllllltlllttlimtllllllillli: Llster Eugene Hines AC.RICLILTllRE Prescoll Harry Wist Hirshheimer . . . La Cri ' .t ■Har MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Dcttd L ' fvikm. A S 1 H ; Varsilv Track ManaRtrr - LlnHin Vodvil 2 . Harcsfoot Show 1 . l ollies 4. Glee Club I 2. -1. Assistant Pnim Chairman 3. Thesis — Test of a I ' arm Tractor. H ClIISIl.R MOESLY ■Chet- AC.RICL ' LTURE A .vi- Haresfooc 1,3: Haicsfoot Club 3; First Regimental Bar ■ 1.2. 3. 4; University Orchestra 1.2. 3. Thesis — Composition and Qualitv of Pastcuri:oi Milt Cheese. Nicholas J. Hoffman Port ' ashinci LETTERS AND SCIENCE Thesis — latcmity Insurance Gretta Fenelon Hol, han .... A acViA LETTERS AND SCIENCE Thesis — Papers on Victor Hugo. Cecil Lloyd Holman .... Fond Ju I . ■Ck commerce . ' cacia; Beta Gamma SiRma. Iron Cross; Nloryistics; Whit Spades. Commerce Magazine 1 Badger B Tard 3 . Harcsli.i Club 2. 3. Manager 4 L nion ' .xlvil 2. 3 Pnxiuction Man agcr 4. 0- mmcrce Club 2. 3, 4. President 3. 4. Captain 5 Junior Play 3, Student Senate 3. Homtxoming Gener.i Chairman 4; Advertising Club President 4 Gl dys. 1. HoLSTEiN Fl Aikin LETTERS AND SCIENCE Kappo Alpha Fheta, LawrerKe College 1.2. Thesis— Mistiiry of Harper ' s Weekly. Ri TH Hopkins Fond ,lii I NOR.MAL SCHOOL COURSE Xhite aler Normal 1. 2 Thesi — InfluerKe of the Predecessors and Contemp - raries of Robert Boms Upon His Work Orlando O Horlamis ' .■ ■,• ■■i ,t„- • AGRICULTURE Mpha Zeta: Cie« 1.2. Associate Editor Wisconsin Coun t rs 1agiirinc 4 . Agnink 4 I hesi« — Factors InflMcnciiv the Co« of Milk Production Ada O. Hor.s letters ann science Alpha Xi Delta. Oihknsh Normal Sch ul Germiinisti che Gcscll chalt Thc« — Aurennruber O.t i u ' W; TllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIItllllllllllllllllllllllllllMllllllllllllili IIIUIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIinilJIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIMtllllMIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIMIMIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIL: .1 iiiA M.xrjduie: Hoskins l.l-,ni:RS ANO SCIENCE I Iakoi 1) John Hosi [r . . . . Hor CIVIL FNCINEERING TnanBlc Carroll G.lk-Rc I Bloominfton Rccdshurg llic :iR ition of BuilJing I ' nil Ptu NlARf.ARF.T CoNDF. HoSMER - shlc LETTERS AND SCIENCE l lla Gamma. Canchir Ctillcw I I hcM I he Rilalion of Parents and Children in Mudiri N(1RA C.HRisi iNi; 1 lo Ri D LETTERS AND SCIENCE Indixjr Baseball 2; Outdoor Baschall 2: V A. A. I hesis— lix-Presidential C;areerb Since IS Elsie, M. I Iowell WivJ iiiW, . LETTERS AND SCIENCE Mortar Board; Secretary Red Gauntlet 2; Secretary W. A A 3; F rcsident V A A 4 Thesis -An K.iposition of the I ' rinclples of Piosc Style. Miriam Bi ardsi i :v Hihbard ■■, . B •• LETTERS AND SCIENCE Beloil CxjllcRC 1,2; Castalia 4 Thesis — Simple .Mgebraic ln ' aiiants. Mailison Ka I MARINE Hudson Charleston. Ill HOME ECONOMICS .Alpha C hi Omefta; Omicton Nu; Iiuthenics Cluh; Con- sumers ' League Thesis — Sohie Substances Which Serve as X ' ltamincs for ' l■ea t Mary I 1. Hi ' DsoN MaJi.wn LETTERS AND SCIIiNCE LVIla Delta Delta. Castalia .• nna Hu(;iies ipa Alpht I hcsis— ITic Lidu LETTERS AND St lENCE: Kappa Alpha TTicta. ■■ ■ al alues . f the Kinder, : t - ' l t I i:airice I Il ' miston . , . . ■•  «■ LEI IERS and .SCIENCI Alpha Chi Omcua, Krd IXmiin... Red I .m.no-l£d IV ■ ha t, .hi t mcua. Red IXmiino. olh Play 2. ?. I ' nion V. lvil 2, .I;.|uniot Ploy J. Soph. ncc CJ.mmittcc. Junior Prom C immittcc 1 Ihc Little 1 heutrc Movement. ■ iltilMlillltlllllllllllirilllllMIIIMIMIIIIIIIIIMIMIMIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIt MiiilllMlllllllllllllr lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllL Mariha Lisii-Lir 1 li Mi ' imrY Madixon ■Humf- HOME ECONOMICS Ripon CaiIIcrc 1. 2; Muthcnics Club. TheM — liurlcy: It Hi Ior anJ L ' « In Modern Diet. Khorf.n Leon Hl ' ssissian Shahih, Kara. Hissar. Arnu ' nia, xia-, tiiK r Htissie MININC. ENGINEERING Ripon CollcRe 1.2; Mining Cluh. Kootboll 1 : Irock S.|uaJ 3; Gl« Club 3; Picsidcnt of Mining Club 4, WiNlFREO Inc.lis 7ani i(on, Icua LETTERS AND SCIENCE Alpba Oniicron Pi. Trances Shimer School of ChicaRO University 1.2; Oirjinal .AdvertiMng Staff 4; Consumer League 4; Treasurer Woman ' s [Ik.iual Suffrage League 3; Advertising Club. ' icc-President 4; iowa Club. Vice- President 4. Thesis — Trarwiation, with f oot Notes, of La FrarKaisc by Brteu.x. Ci-ARA Ingwerson Chicago LETTERS AND SCIENCE Alpha Phi: Mortar Board; Badger EJoard 3; Vice-Presi- dent of Class 1: Vice-President Y W. C. A. 4. Thesis — .A Survcv of the Commitments to the Rock County Jail. 1912-1917. George H. Irwin Lodi Doc MEDICAL COURSE Sigma Phi Epsilon; Lawrence College I. 2; Medic Foot- ball 4 Thesis — Topographical Anatomy. M CAiL. Y Irwin Quincy. III. .Mac COMMERCE Beta Theta Pi: Oberlin CoIIcrc 1 Thesis — The Organization of a Public Health System ' iewed (mrn the StarxJpoint of Financial .-Ndministration. George S.Jackson De Perc Jack ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Thests A Study of Sky Brightness. Glstav R. Jacobi .... CranJ Forks. , . D. Jakt AGRICULTURE Beta Tficta Pi: Football 1: Track I. Varsity Football 2. •w ■■ Myra Bertha Jahr SeillsriUe HOME economics L ' nivcrsitv of Illinois 1. 2. 3 Thesis — The Digestibility of Acrt lcin. Frances Marguerite Jamieson . ShuUsbura Fran LETTERS AND SCIENCE S( CUra Colteae I. 2: S C A Board 4 Thcsi — Society at Rotne in the Time of Cicero. ' iiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiriiiiiiri(iiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir Patt 6« iiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiniiDiiiMiinih iiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ' - f KAV IS RiMi Janm V Rtchland CvnUr ■Jon MI-.DK.INI-; l hi Iklii I ' l. (MTriM Ca.Wchc I. 2, Intru Mural |- xitl-ull 4. I hf is — ri;| )gruphic Anutomv LisrHLR Jknkins Milwaukee i.iirrr RS and s(.ii;n ;|i Milwaukee Slate Normal I. 2 I htsi-. Ihe Vy( ■,( Ualh in KnKli-h Lilcraturc SiAi.Ri M Ji;ns£;n Clinlo ■Jen,- Al.RICl I.TlRl: (.aplain Ak Crew 2. ARnculture Literarv Sixietv. Secre- larv 5. Mresidem 4. L niverMIv Live Sl.ick Cluh 2 hesl — A Studv of the Centurv Sires of the Hi.lstein- 1 ries.an Breed MvRiLi; R JoBSE Milu-auke IKIMP. FXONOMICS Stout Institute I. 2, Secretary of Ccnsumers League ?; Uuthenies Cluh; S ' W, C A Cabinet Cxjuncil 4, SufTraRc I.eaRUe riiesls -Home for Deperidint Children. Roll- J()llANNF.sr-:N I i:nr;Rs and scienc.i-: I ' hi Beta Kappa CiiNiv II i: (_:. Johnson LKTIERS AND SCIENCE Thesis— The Geographic influences on the History of Green County. Portage (iKAci- .Xi.K.i. Johnson iioMi; ix.onomk;s WashinRlon University 1. 2. Eulhcnics Club. O I.eaRUe Ihesis— Ihe Cjilorimetrie MethiO of DeterniininR .Vcr. lein Bi.RNARD Johnson liaii Claire •■« ■«, ■■ ■Ozont ' PHARMACY Iheta Chi. C .mmeice Crew 2. CJioial l nion 1, 2. c:hip- iHvia Vollev Cluh I. 2. !, 4 The • ' -- ■ ' -• • MlLDRKI5 I£mMA JtlHNSON ... Madison LEITERS ANI .St.lENt.E I hesis -l.eRislation for Relief of the I ' oor in Wisconsin Ri SSI I. I.owilLI. Johnson . ■7u inny- I AW l hi IX ' lla I ' hi Madison iituiiiituiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiihiiiiiiiiiiniiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilin rJlllliiiilliiiilllllllliii. .iilllllllllllllliiiiiiiii. iiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiii ' er . L Johnson HOME FXONOMICS l nrK.« Nu: KulhcnKs Club; Rtxky M. CriW Falh. . Lml. c:iub. W Kl.TciN E Johnson Xmher SueJe COMMERCE Acociu. Cornill CU IIcrc I, 2. Bustball 4: C mmcicc Club J. 4. Sccrctarv 4. Thesis — The Klarkctinu of a Public Utility Sccuiity. Irene Helen Jones 3ur ini, ' (cin LETTERS AND SCIENCE Gamma Phi Beta. BowlinK 2; President Bowling Lcaguc 1, S. G. A Treasuier 4, Thesis — Cicero in the MaKOzmes. (- larence EcBERT Josephson . . Cambridge ■Jot- commerce Theta Chi: Beta Gamma Sigma; Commerce Club Thesis — The Retcnjing of (Ajrchascs. Sales, and Returns. Lalr.v Jl ' lio Chicago letters and science Valparaiso University I. 2; Castalia. Thesis — BrofcTiing ' s Choice and Treatment of Subject- matter. Helen Theresa Kammerer .... Racine ■Kam LETTERS AND SCIENCE Alpha Xi Delta. Milwaukce-Downcr I Thesis — Leigh Hunt us a Literary Critic GUSTAV L ' . KaPPEL W u i i ' Cuzzie AGRICULTURE Thesis — Factors in the Wintering of Bees Raymond E. Karcher .... Freeporl, III. Ray commerce Sigma Alpha Epsilon : Commerce Club Thesis — Labtir Problems of the Railroads. Harry Edward Kasten Juneau ■Pror LETTERS AND SCIENCE Milwaukee N ' ormnl 2, SccihxI Regimental liand, M 1 R C . AssiMant in . ' Vnatomv 4. Thesis — Topographical Anatomy. Florence Rose Keeley . . BiHy LETTERS AND SCIENCE f ' alU Normal School 2 IhlMV f Ju t irjimmar Test rillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllii illilllllMIMMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIMIIMIIIIMIIilllillllllllllR iiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiMiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiihiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiniMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiKMiiii! Miiiiiiiiiiiiii: m S W H I iwi l Ki I Liv .... Miichdl. S D. A(.RICL ' I.TLRF. I hi Kappa Pm. Kiippa Beta Phi; Friars; Yellow Helmet: Prc-.iJent Intcr-rratcrnitv Council; Varsitv i-oott-iall 2. ). 4. W Varsitv I rack 3; Varsity Basketball 3. Rush Captain. I lareslcot 4 I hcMs— StuJv of the Production of the L ' nivcrsilv Dairy HerJ lor the I car I ' ll Chicago lil i:. Hi;ill NoRRUS KlJNDALL . ' llelsy AGRICULTURE Mortar litJarJ: Keystone, S- G- A Census C hairman; W. A. A ; Business Manager Shux. Thesis— I he RiTect of Mechanical Injury Upon the Ger- mination of Small Grains (;i ARA l.OL I.SA t-| i:i ' Kii Madisc ■Kufl y- LF-TTERS AND SCIENCE W A A Board 1 lockcv; Varsity 2. 3.4; Baskctlsall, Var- sit 3. Baselsall 2, 3. Varsity 3 riiesis — Development of Poor Law in Wisconsin. Gar ER Kerch Akron, 0. COMMERCE Phi SiKma Kappa; Monastics Thesis — .-Xn .Analysis of the Organization and ManaRc- ment of a Furnace Factory, and Suggested Improvements. Edna .Marie Kesler Peoria, III. LET I ERS and SCIENCE Bradley Polytechnic Institute 2. Thesis — The Monroe Doctrine and the Carribean Sea l A NODENE KetCHAM Madt. V : i ■.1 Tl ' f - ' LETTERS AND SCIENCE Thcta SiKma Phi; Wisconsin Magazine. .Associate Iiditor 2. 3; Pvthia; French Cluh. C crman Club; Vilas Prize 2.. Thesis — Papers on the I ' rench Poets of the Nineteenth Century Francis Orton Keves . LETTERS AND SCIENCE Sigma Alpha Fpsilon; Football 3 4. V. Basct ill 2; Baskctlsall I . Class Baseball 2; Band I. 2 Thesis — The Distribution of Blood During E. crci5C. PARSiiGH Benjamin Kiiani.ian . Talas, Ceasari ' a. Armenia Ki[ n College 2. Mary l-i la Kilpatrick Belmont ■L i Pcii ■ MUSIC SUPERVISOR Clioral Union 1.2. Glee Club 2. Emily Amantha Kimhall .... PlattcvMc Li;i TERS and SCIENCE iiilillllllllllM44(IIHIIIIHUIIIIIIIHIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIillllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllir Illllllllllllllllll iiiiMiiiiiliiiillliiililMillllliiliiiir- Alice ' an Patten King Madison ••fjHy LHTTERS ANO SCIENCE Kappa Kappa Cfumma; Swimming 1 ; W. A. _A TtlcM — rranslations of Eissmys from La ' k ' Lillcrnirc of Anatole Trance. Marvin Stepiikn KiNc. Arivui ■Afciri COMMERCE Beta Gamma Sigma; 0 mmcrct Club; Editor-in-Chief Commerce Nlagazinc 4. Advcrti inB Manager. Cardinal 3 Thesis — Go ernment Advertising Since the Outbreak of the War. L- RJORiE KiNNAN Madisort LETTERS AND SCIENCE Kappa Alpha Theta; Phi Beta Kappa; Mortar Board; .Associate liditor .-Xwk 3. . ssociate boitor Wisconsin Lit- erary faga=inc 3. 4; Badger Satire Eioard 2: Woman ' s Editor I 18 Badger; Badger Special F- eature Editor 4, Red Domino Vice-President 4; Junior Plav 3; Union ixi- vil 2. 3; German Pluv 2; Red DomintvEdwin Booth Pro- ductions 2. 5. 4. Junior Play Committee 3; Shakespeare Massiue 2. Senior Plav Committee 4. .Assistant Chairman Prom Relreshment Committee 5. Sophomore Ways and Means Committee 2; Noon Convocations Committee 4. Thesis — Paganism in Modern English Poetry. Frank Cvrenls Kinsman .... Manaua ■Franz MEDICINE Phi E -ta Pi ; Sigma Sigma. Thcsis — IrKlu trial Hygiene in the Manufacturing of Toxic Gases. Louis A. Kirch Mazomanie Katzi€ engineering Triangle. Civil Engineers ' Society. Thesis — Investigation for a Proposed Water Power Devel- opment tin the Oconto River, at Oconto. Wis. tncent Earl Kivlin Oregon ■Kii ■ AGRICULTURE .Alpha Gamma Rho; Junior Prom Committee. Thesis — The Hemp lixlustry in Wiscotviin. Karl C. Kleimenhacen Kilhourn ■Kltimc- chemical engineering Alpha Chi Sigrna; Northwestern College I; Secretary- Treasurer Chemical Engineering Society 4 Theresa Marie Kleinheinz . . . Madison ■Tries letters and science Sophomore Honors; Pythia 3. 4 Thesis — Julius Caesar in Ciceros Letters loNE M. Klenk Sandusky. U. cetters and science Achoth; Camcgiic irutitute of Technology I; S G. A Board 2. 3; Camp Fire Thesis — A Comparison of Shcllc ' s Dramas with Greek Tragic Art Marion Ar.msjrong Knight . Dallas. Texas LETTERS AND SCIENCE Beta Theta Pi. Scabhard and Blade. University of Texas I, 2. 3, French Club 4. First Lieutenant Cadet Corps Thes — Strikes In War Times. niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiirtiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiijiiiiiiiiiir: MIHIIIIMIIItili illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltMIIIIIIIIIIM ■ a 1 A 1 , 5}.. .A - -« . ivJ-l |-- i liNsi V Kn ! m;k IntcruaU I 111 II RS ANO Sf IPNCF. Archirv 2 iiimi I iiim 3. I li i.i-.N SliiiDDN Kniiwlion A oi i.von Li;i IKRS AND SCIENCI-: Kappa Alphu Ihito. Wistonvin LitiTar M.iKa:mc Sial( Ihcxis— 11 (. Will-. MaK(.ari I Run R Kniiwlion . a (non LL 1 1 RRS AND SC.IENCK Kappa Alpha Thcia ITicMs— 1 lumhlc Lili- in llnRlish P.xtrv Dunni; (he Laitcr i lalf .( Iht Kiuhtccnlh Cinlury Marv KnuKTK.H Tacc ma. Vu.i i. LETTERS AND SCIENCE M irlar lioard I ' hcvis — McaninR and Applicatum (tf l- ' air Valuation ' a-. L ' scd hy the Public I tilny .mmi-.M,m Alered Koeitler Maniiouoc CIIEMISIRV ChcmiMry I dlo ship rhi-.i — Ihc lifTcct of Certain Insuluhli: Oimp- viic-. Lpim Infectious Patholopcal Ornanivnis II I I AM All Ri n KoM sen lioise. IJaho liiir MEDICINE Kappa Sjcma, ThcMs — Tui )nraphical Anatorrty. C.I.ARENI E E KoHl I lurU-y ■Chuk- GENERAL COURSE 1. ii S (.ri« I , Class Track 1.2. Varsity Foollsall 2 . Class UaskctHull 2, Inlcr-CjillcRi- Foothall 3 Ihcsi I ' lic Rcdistrihution of Blood in the lV.Jy  ith Muscular Vork Alheri I Itnrv Ki human Lt li ;?«■• LEI ii:rs and science Plattcville Normal I. 2. llesperia. Mathematics Cluh i ' hests — rundamental Pn pertics of Dclcmiinants and Matrices [• ri D A KoRsr Jancsiillc l- ' cJJy ' Al.RK I ' LTl ' RE I ' hcsis— Specifications lor Iractcir Hitches ( arl Fkederk. Km ii.ER Mihfaukcc I IK IRIl AL ENt.lNEERIN ' t. Iheia . i. I-Ja Kapp4i Nu. lixccutivc ( jtmmillcc linRi- ..ts Minstrel. 2 l V Imposition. Wireless 1. Oncf ' ix-rator I ' KaJio Stnlion I 1 Kcsis -l ycliisment ol Kecorder for Wireless Tcleu- ' .il iy I iillMllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllr I ' a,, ;4 Jlllllllllllllltllllllllllllll. .Illlltlllllllllllll; illllllllllMIMIIItMIIIIIHIIIMMIMIillllllllilll ' . Waltlr C ' .iiARLis Kraat: litu nikci- Li;i ii;rs amd s( ie ( i; Ele. nor Krai£mi;r MliSIC SUPERVISOR Swimming 1 . W A. A ; C cl Club. ThcMs — luMC Supt-rvision- Elmer O. Kr. emer A i iiiji(A:iv CHEMISTRY Augusta Kreitzer Sturf,con [ia Cusiit LETTERS AND SCIENCE Lawrence Colteffc I . Thesis — SchtlU ' r s RcliRion Els. Kremers MaJison LETTERS AND SCIENCE Alpha Phi; Cascalia: Clef Club. Thesis — The Four Elements in Literature anj .Art. with Special RefereiKe to Lucretius Florence I. Kriecer Langjord. S. D. Stuffy LETTERS AND SCIENCE Acholh. N N I S . Aberdeen. S D 1.2. President Junior Mathematics Club • , President IrKloor Baseball 3. V A Rose .- Kri; Mduaukcc •Doc LETTERS AND SCIENCE Milwaukcc-CXjwner 2. Theus— The Relative Position of the ' t the EJodj from Foetus Thru .Adult Life Wabun Clvxrence Kruecer . agriculture (Vsans John F. Kuehnl Oshkosh Normal ■Jack LAW Er.nest Gottfried Ki e.n:i PHAR.MACY Thesis — taKnia«. Sawwr Madison Colgate niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiMiniiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiMiiMMMiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiir; Pat ' n ' ii uiiiniiiiiiliiiilillliiliiiniiiiniiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiitiilllilllllii [ « n I • a -i Ri III C. Kiiivs MaJiscn HOMI£ nCONOMK-S Alpha i Delta. W A A . lio linR 3. VarMtv J: French ( :iuh I . O .niunicr LcaKUc Iluvis— Ihe L sc of (j.tton a- a Sub-ututc fur Linen anJ i..| in the Prevent War I ON AS L l.A ( ROSSE . PHARMACY MaJn .South Wayne Mari.i RV I-AfV .... .MISIC Asv,«.iate MeniKr Clef Club; Eau Claire Normal 2. ( ' iiARiis B Lakuff Chicago ■Lake ' MEDICAL COL RSE Phi [Icta Pi: Chicago L ' niverbitv 1. 2 Ihe-is— A StuJ of the PathoU.RN- c.f the Tisvuo of C.ai ed t-LORE tt: May Lampert . MLSIC SLPERVISOR L,. ' na. lit. chnth. Choral L ' nion L 2: Equal Suffrage League; Girls ' Ice C:iuh 2; Castalia 2; Daily Ordinal 2. Iiesib— Music in the Public Schools. on RoBFRT Lange Vai .sau LETTERS AND SCIENCE Superior Normal I, 2. ITiesis — Comparison of Premium Rates on CVdmary Poli- tics of Old Line Companies. . kso Robert Lanc.jahr .... Plymouth ■Doc ' MEDICAL COLRSE heta C hi. Phi Beta Pi. Sigma Sigma. Philomathia; Junior ■u.m O.mmittee 5 hesis — Dctcimination of Blood Volume and Study of ■ Lirgical Shock. 1 Laiiirop liriJgcfwt LETTERS AND St;lEN( E W ' .C. . T. 4. Student Volunteer Foreign Mission Bund; 1 1 II K. Lee Stoughlon MUSIC c-Prcsidcnt MuMC Supcrvivirs 2. Ml HI W llll .MLR LllKEL ■Hob ACRICULTl ' RE ' ' hkltJl Normal 1 . 2 I hesi — IVublems in Wheat Smut Dnllion • tiiinilllillllllllllllllllllll mil ' inilllllMllllllllllllllllllllllllliiiliililllllllllllUilllllinillllllllMlllin Pat ::ii!iiiiitiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiniiiiiitiii iiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiit. Robert Ffrdinano Levt An tiijrdi Bo ' COMMERCE l hir[V u ullc riuh Ihc i — ln CNtii;iition of Procedure of the WcIN and L cke Co PrcxrcdmR tfic L ' ndclwrilinR of [3ond Is uo Win Pail I.ianc. Canlon, Chtnn Capfy ' ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Wabash College. Itxi . 1: A I E E ; International Cluh; Chinese Student , ' Club. Treasurer 3, 3. ' icc-President 4. (Resident • Thesis — TrafTic Slodv and Design of an InicrurKin Elec- tric RuiUav between Madison and Janesvillc. Wisconsin Frwklin L Liebenstein CascaJe ACRICLLTLRE Agricultural Lite Inllucncing the Cost of Milk Pm- ducticn. Palline G. Liebic W ' csi BcnJ LETTERS AND SCIENCE Xlilwaukcc Normal I. 2; Gcrmanislische Gcsellschaft. Thesis— Schiller Cecilia Marie Lins Sprin ; Creen COMMERCE SophonrKire hfcmois; Women ' s Commerce Club. Treas- 1 IvMAN Stanley Lipschltz . . 5c«.ij COMMERCE Thesis — The Boixi Issues of the Civil War. Oconto Falls Mary Frances Little tcnash, Mary Lit HO.ME ECONO.M1CS Delta Delta Delta. Wvsl nx 2. 3: i3sdgcr Board 3: Red Domino. Sect ctar 2 . Union Vodvil 2 . Glee Club 2.3; Prom Committee 3. Iixcr Committee 2. Thesis— The Vx of the Little Plate Method for Diphtheria Esther Eugene Lime FlanJrcaii, S. D. MEDICAL COURSE Lk HE Harsiiaw Logan ■ Looit ' . LEI TERS AND SCIENCE St. Louis. . n. Karrv NJP Theta. Washington L ' niverslty I. 2 Thou — The Open - - - . . in the Procnt Wa cration and Influence of the Central Banks DoROTfO ' Loomis .Mod,. ■ LETTERS AND SCIENCE K«pra Kappa Gamma. Stetson University I. fortar Board. Basket Ball I. 2. 1. W A. A.. Winner of Annual hlottKultuial Eauy Contest 3 Thoo — Studies in the Dncaso of Roses -lllllllllllllllllllMIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIlii IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIillllllllllllllllllllMIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIir; iiiiMiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiM ntiiiiiiiih iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii : miN L wvRi N( I l. M)Mis . AfaJiii Mr.DK.AL COl ' RSE Miindi.lin Cluli 2, 1. L ' S Arniv Medical Rc-M.rv ; 0.rp , llosp.iul I ' nil CjiJci C.rp- 4 Alhinuc l.ilcrarx- Sociilv : (huirman AdvtrliMni; r .mmiuci- |u|8 Junior Prom I H1E-: Kaiiirkps Loitks . . IIOMF. ECONOMICS rhcsi — Hcul Pinctral ion of Canned l-ixxlMuff-. .ViNrsCri-i STINI- Loit.HLiN . . MaJison LEI IF-RS AND SCIENCE Icma Universiiv 1.2, TwcKth Nitiht President 4. KevMone: Lnion V «J il 4 Thc-is— A (.(imparauve Study of the Voice in Speakins and SinninR li 1,1 N Irene Lolnsblry .... Madison LE ITERS AND SCIENCE C.irls ' Glee Cluli I. 2. 1. 4; CoMolia. MuMcal Director 1 Ihevis — The Women of Joseph (jmrad  i (B f ' % t ( - ♦ ' ' ■ ' % % • 1 i MA C. Ll ESSEN VjHi-.v Cily. S D. LETTERS AND St lENCE W A A 1. Basket Hall 4; 1 l(x:kev 4, I rack 3. I WHS R M . teer Occincmouvi: •a;,,.-.- -J.mmy- CIVIL ENt.lNEERINC. Triangle. Civil linmneerinR Society 2. 3: HnRineer Crew. 2, J ■ TheMs— Ihe LfTecl of Different Melhcxls of FloatinR upon the W ' earinu Surface of Concrete Elizabeth Llcille McCarthy LETTERS ANL S ;iENt E M K ' . Rii M RY 1( C ' ariiiy Mcllcn 111 lERS AND St II N( E Alpha Chi IVncua l-metMin College I. 2 Red l MHino IheM Pie Relation Between the Singing Moiv.tone and the Six-aking ' olce . i 11 I M( (Ilymoni HOME E( ONOMICS I ' l Beta l hi. II I lAM l-UAsi R M( ( oil Roberix ■ink • Ml ni( INI. Sigmn Nu. Medical I - iIniII 4 I ralernilv I ' oolhall 4 rillltllMMIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllMllllllllillllllllllllMIIIIIIIIII -llllillllllllllMMIIIilllllllMli •illllllllllllllllllli iiiiiiMriiiiiiiiiliiltiiiiitilllllMlliiL Allvn C ' hasi- NU.Cl ' lloui-.h A uc ' ( LK iRHLVL i;nc.inli;rin . VhcM — InvotiKiition kI the Pn pcrlics ot Mlov lii v iNA May Mai l )oi(..ALi. MOMl: LCONOMK S 7ii(i-iiu(i- - DtlNALO W ILLIAM NUGlNNlS Kansas C ' lfv, A o COMMERCE Beta Thcta Pi. Beta Gamma Simria: Star and Arrou . Sifcma Gammii. Inm Crt ss; Gym Team 2. 1. W Cap- tjin 4; Athletic BoanJ 4, Commerce Club 4; Union B4)ard Treasurer 4. ProiJent 4. Spanish Club; Student Senate 4 OHincil of Defense 4 Thesis — An Accountms S stem for Fraternities IXiROTHY Ellen McGinnis Kansas C ' lfv HOME economics Pi Beta Phi Kansas State ARricultural College I . : Thesis— The History and Organi:ation of Child Wcll.i Work in the United States pRyWCES Josephine McKay Fall H: LETTERS AND SCIENCE Pvthia J. 4; Junior Mathematics Club 3. 4. Thesis — Theory of Linear Dependence. Marie McKnic.ht South Wuvnt LETTERS AND SCIENCE I hcsis — . ' Vrmy IX-vclopmcnt Since the Spanish-.Amencan Marjorie Mc.Mlrry . Xashvillc. Tcnn. LETTERS AND SCIENCE Twelfth Night. Clef Club. Pythia Thesis— The Relief Work of the Women of Illinois Durinu the Civil Wor K THERINE Virginia Mabis D« Moines, oi LETTERS AND SCIENCE C amma Phi Beta. Myuic Circle; French Club I. 2. 1, French Ploy. I. J. 4. Vodvil 2 Thesis — ' iclor Klufto Marclerite Helen Madden Menominee, Mich LETTERS and SCIENCE Thcus — Local hlptory of Menominee. Michigan. Betsey Madison .... Bowling Green. K Ma HOME ErONOMIf:S Achoth. Omicmn Nu. Secretary 4. Western Kenluct Slate Norrnal 2. Y W C A Cabinet Council 4. Di i. Club. Viee-Pre-Klem J ThesM — Teaching of Textilo in Nonnal Schools o( tl ■ ' led 5tair niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMn I ' at ' illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMIIHIIIIMIIMIIIIIMIMMIIIIIMIillllllllllllllMlll-- xJM f ' 3t f rV w --■ ' — ' ■ ■ ' iK 1 ( Mil. W Ai.Di.MAR Mai Dji; liast Clcicland. 0. l.mi RS AND StlF.NCE •hi K.ippa Psi. Iriiirs. VorMly Hockey 2. !. 4; Assistant ' ■usincss Murnincr Lilcriiry Ma iirinc J. 4; Harcsfcxit 2, ' resident 4; Prtijuciion ManjiKcr h 17 f-ollics; Senior Ploy; iptiiin K O T C. , Varsity Cheer Leader. i he ' -is — Auzengrulser the Dramatist I XASDKR C ' . MaERCKKR .... ■Merck ' ELECTRICAL F.NCINFF-RINt. larsiuette Lniversity 1. A L E. E. hesis— Sky l3riKhtness sM in William Maim ami ■ Km AGRICILILRE . l ilu aiikee yARD I Mallov Pert V ' a.v iin (on Af.RICLLTlRE ' -hkosh Normal ■irii Margarli Mariin .... Vai iim LETTERS AND SCIENCE lrha Xi tDclta. University of Chicago 1. 2. W. A A ; i ' ltkey 2; Swimming 1. 2; Oiptain 2; Pylhia 1. 2. 3. 4. I reasurcr 2; ' I ' acnpcra Camp Fire; V. . ' A Play; Junior I ' r.im Committee ) NCES Theodosia .Martin . it- ii ' an City, InJ ' ■■ ■in- HOME ECONOMICS Lhoth; Stout Institute 2; Castalin; Euthenics; Camp Eire. I liesis— The Effect of Aeration on Eat Soluble A i I EN .XnneMariin .... HOME ECONOMICS lpha . i Delta; Indoor BascbalL I hesis— .Aelion of Rennin on Mills. ll I.ANDIS MaRITN . . . . Li I PFRS ANI SCIENCE liradley Institute, Pc.rin. Ill I 1 hesis Ainlcinivrary linglish Poetry. )1 ' .ARI I MWER XlaJison CttU-tl. Ark. Ji-fffrsor Mi-SK. Ahilcwiilcr Normal 1. Clef Cluh. President 4; Qioral Ihes ' is-Ihe Hoy oicc. Marion Catherine Mayers . . . MaJiscn LEIIF.RS ANIl SCIENCE ( .nmma l hl IWta iiiiiHiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiinniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiMMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin Pait SO cM :illlillllllllllllllllllllllllMIMIIIIIIIIMtllllllllllllllllllllllllllll ' ItllllllllllllllMMIIIIIIIIinillllllllllllllllllU Ann I ' ll Miisi-twii: •Ihilch CIVIL KNl.INERRINC. Trmnftlc; linsmctr BastUlll 2. Knginccr Min trcK 2 Thois— DcMgn ..f u I ' lirk for Richliind Ccnur loHN Mi£rsc:HL Mtlxiaukiw LETTERS AND SCIENCE Milwaukee Nomiul 2 Thesis — The Quantitalive AnalvMs of Si inc Hopi aiiJ Tewa Pbtter ' Clav and Paim Ermsi L. Mkver Milwaukee Ernie LETTERS AND SCIENCE Harrison A. Meyer Miluaukc LETTERS AND SCIENCE Basket hall 1.2. [Jaseball I ; Mathematics Cluh 1. 4 Thesis— invariants The Theor - of Matricc lation to ihe Solution of Systems of Linear s and lis Kc- Etiuations William Frederic Mever ■Chitl Mihtaukcc ' St. AGRICULTURE A ema. Sub on 1 18 l-rcshman Crew: Badg ' I hesis — FccJini; Draft lutals. •r Boat Cluh M.VRC.ARET L. MiDDLEKAUFF SftringheUI. Ill LETTERS AND SCIENCE Alpha Gamma Delta. N rth estem University 2 Thesis — Administration of Governor Yates During the Civil War .Alois J. NliKNA Atilwaukcc ■Mick MECHANICAL ENGINEERING A S M E Thesis — Comparative Tests of Cylinder Lubrication of a Semi-Diesel Ennine AuDRA Evelyn Miller Lfhanon, Ind LETTERS AND SCIENCE Delta Delta Delta; Illinois Woman ' s College 1. 2 Thesis— The .Armv Service Schools at Leavenworth. Florence E Miller La Crosse LETTERS AND SCIENCE La Crosse Normal 2 Thesis — Eiarly Missions of California Jo in Coventry Miller letters antj science % ' hiie Spades: Clus Crew 2. ). 4: Daily Cardinal 2. Assistant Business Vlonafier 1 , Bijsincss Vfanaitcr 4 . l-fes- psrr..i ). 4. I hesis — Foftns and Effects of Existing Railway Compc- inUnilllllllllllUllllltlilillllilllllllllllllllllllllllltllllMIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIMIIMIIIIIIIIMIIIHIIMIIIillllllllllllllMIIMlR 6 P t ' -11 9 • • s ■  • ' 1 - i ' f V r- : ilMIIIIIIMIIIIIIMMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIilllllllllllllllllllllllllll I I II A 11 AN(.i 1 IM Nlin r F( EvaruvMe MlMl IXIlii ncitii IXIla. t.irls C.lic t;iul-. 3. ?. 4: Clhorul L!mon I 2 IhcM llu- liMiniiiti..n ..f Mu-icul Ahililv and lU Appli- culioii 1.. PuWit Scho..l MUML Raymond Milii:r A i7i aukee MIXIIANICAL |;N(.1NI liRIN 1 hiM u SiKina. A S M I-: --1 kul Ircatmcnl ul SucI (il OKI L Kl LAR Mills G K I ' MARMAfY «ia Lake 1 hisi - Ikp anc as a Suhsiuuu- 1 cal Prcparatiiins jr Mt - tx l in Smic 1 AMIS Smw vRi Mills ■Doc- MLDK INL Jan esiillc Class Irack . 2 11 I lAM Klnm:iii Mills Hazel Green ■ V K,- I ' HARMACY IIk-s, Kcsul -The mK Ir. I ' rcparatitin nf Phcispha m the Punlk-ati.m dI A cs fro lallal T the Re Charc.uil ivluc Pansy Mai MoDLSITI Tcrre 1 laiilL . InJ. AI.RICL ' LTl RF, Mu Z Lla. (a slaha.(JlccClub. -Attrii nk- (J ARA . Iargari; I N Ioi:scmli-:r AdTtVU Pent ■Mesh- Li;rTi:RS and s ::ience Slevens l ,.im Normal 2, German Cluh . 4 Ihesis— Ihe Territorial IXvclopmcm of Alaska Hdwin a Moiiaii . tadnon COMMERcr; Beta Ciamma Siftma. C nimercc Club. Avociatc Editor ( ' inmerce MaRazine 4. Ftxtd PnxJuction 5. Sccrctorv. The AdvertisinK CluH 4 H ' .esis -C«i crnment AdvcrttsinR Since the Bcamninii of Ihc War. Irani.ls Moil llT Wtehila, Kans. HOME ECONliMK S iirmount Cxillcnc . l It E liLIIAHEIIl M(X)NEY .... SufKrior LETTERS AND St.lENtE Superior Nornvil I : W A A I. 4. StufI Wisconsin Literary MuKijzinc 1. liditur I imar l Muuuzine 1 lhcM — Transliili.Mi ' lin lV.n Petit. Diablc hy Rcao- tiHjndc Cicriird ui d Maurice Kostand HIIIIMIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIinillllMllllllli illlMUIIIMMIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIir JIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIHinii: IIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIHIIU GKNKVirVE 1 0 VNS MlX)RF. . JollCl. Ill IIOMR KCDNOMICS l nicn n Nu. Iiuthcnics C ' lub ThcMN — ' itamtncs in Rclunun to ' ' cu t. Cfori.e T. loiIRK Oshkosh Tom MECHANIOVL EN( ' .INHERING A S M E . l rt!.idcnt 4 Thesis — DcsiKn of n StCiinvMlcctric t-nmnc Glenn Edward Moore lhton, InJ Crmnit Ar.RK ' .ULTL ' RK Delta Phi Upsilon: BonJ 1. 2. 3. 4 ' llicsis — C ' omposicion and Quality of Pavtcuriro.1 Milk Ch«3 . Kathryn Morris Alai isi n letters and science Vi conMn MaRnrinc 2: Awk 2 Thcsts — Comparative Studies in American Shoit Stories Since I80 . Meade M. Morris Mai.Uscn Ham LETTERS AND SCIENCE Acacia; Artus; Badger 2. 3; Junior Play; Homecoming Cofruntttcc WI7 Thesis — Traffic Congestion in the United States, with Spe- cial RefereiKe to the Present War. Nellie Esther Morrissey Bloominglcn HOME ECONOMICS Downer ColleRe I ; Secretary Euthenics Club J. Thesis — Problems of Conservation — Food Waste. R.NYMOND P. Morrissey Madison Dutch COMMERCE i SiRrna Kappa. Thesis — .-Vnalysis of Scientific ManaKement. Edwin French Morse Sauk CVndT, Minn •Ed LETTERS AND SCIENCE Varsity Track 3. 4; Associate [Editor WIS Uadticr. Pn - ductKin Stafr Junior Play 3; Production Staff L ' nion V.«J- vtl 4 lnviUllion Committee 4, Economics Club; Spani h Club Thesis — The New ln.stitucional Treatment of the Juvenile DclirKjuent. Ernest Benedict Morse i i f(i n ELECTRIC ENC.INEERINC. Thcta Xi, Eta Kappo Nu. Tau Beta Pi, Lawrence ( jilleRc. I . Ennirtccrs ' Cluh Milton Moses .... Chicago Heighlt. Ill •Milt. Moott LETTERS AND Sf IEN E Artu tlmi.u- I ri.i-urtt I. fVesidcnt 4; Menornh S - ciet ■ I. Zi ' tnixt S«ictv, .Assistant tWU I orcnMC Board 4. l- ' irw LicTi It Dchnlr. (loser 2, S. phi - mort rr. I ' lnal (Vmtest 3. Ilamil- lon itrM 4 Thcui — Joiftt Dcholc Work. TllllllllllllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII! illMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIilMllllllllllillllllllllllllMMIIIIIlIi Patt  I illMtlltlltlllllMIIIIIDIHtllllMlllllli; .llllllllllltllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllu -ra . V - , f. •  , -!► ' ' ■ 1 • II lOK tXIMON MOSI.S Lau Ctatre COMMERCE Ihcsis— Railrcud-. as Means of Naliunal DcfcriM: E3as«l on Rctcnl Kunipcan txpcncnto AlI RIil5 DNk Fl 1 IR Port Wash ngton ■Alf NORMAL. COL RSI-; Milwaukee Stale Normal 2. IhcMi — PsytholoKical lilements in Read ng Ability. 1 1 RNARO MlM-RN Slurgivn Bay •RtJ ' MEDICINE Gamma 1 au l la. Clohhlcrs niesis l he P..sill..n of the Colon asSc n hy the X-Ray. Eleanor Janet Ml ri ' hy Buifalo, A ' . Y. ■■. ■icfc- LETTERS AND SCIENCE Fredonia New lork Normal 2. W 3 . ( hjtdoor Baseliall 3 Ihesiv — Cnomonia Venela A A : Indoor Baseball I.ORNA Mi ' RPHY Waiikcn. Iowa LETTERS AND SCIENCE Delia Delia IMla Thesis Ct urse — French Romanticism. Saml EL A. MiRPiiY Madison ■Sam . SreeJ MEDICINE Irvini; I Ml ' SKal A: MEDICINE Pianisi for Gfcc Club; Vicnorah Society. TTiesis — . ' Vnaphylaxis and Its Relation to Disease. oiiN . Nash Juneau LETTERS AND SCIENCE Walters. Na I HAN Mi icaiifeiv •Vail ENC.INEERINt . Tau IV ' ta Pi, Swimminii I, 2. 3; Wisconsin Engineer. As- MMant Ixlilor 4 hes| — Ihc History and Development of the lilettric IraLlion Motor. . x ( iMii . Nave Ailica, InJ. Cy- COMMERI ' .E (J.mnierceClub4,ll. .lerClu i2 3. Jvcrlisinu CluS 4 . lheM — ! Iislory of the lileclric Rail«a s MMiiHiiiiHIIIIIMIIIIIIMIIIIIIil illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIlr Patt m illlllllllllllllilllllllllllllUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIi IIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHMIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIH Elmer M. Nelson GnmJ Raf iJ. ACRICUHURE Awcma. Alpha Zcio. Phi LaniKJo L ' pmIoo; Ak Cross Coun- lr ' 2 ThcMs— A Study or Soy Bean Oil Inorid OiASE Nelson Neu BrunsivUk, i . J ■Inkit LETTERS AND SCIENCE Thcta SiRma Phi; Mortar Board: S G A . President 4; V. A A Board 3; Varsity Tennis 2. 3; Doily Cardinal 1.2: Assistant Editor o( Woman ' s Page 3; Yellow 1 assel. Vice-President 3; Castalio, Vice-President 3; Y W C A.: Scoops Club 3. Thesis— Carlvles Treatment of Frederick the Great Viewed in the Light of the Present Situation in Germany. LiTiE Marie Nelson Racine LETTERS AND SCIENCE Glee Club 2, 3: Hockev 2. 3. • ; Indoor Baseball 2. i. Base- ball 1; Track 2. 3. -W - Thesis — Motifs in Mikele English RomarKcs. Marion C THERINE Neprud . . CoonX ' atlcy Net) LETTERS AND SCIENCE La Crosse Normal School 1. 2. Girls ' Glee Club; Cheer- leader Yellow Tassel 3. Blue Dragon 4; Y. W C A Cjibi- net Council 4; Suffrage Leaoue 3. 4; Geneva Club 4. Con- sumers ' League. E.xceulive Board 4; Assistant Circulation Manager War Cardinal 4; .Assistant Chairman Class Mix- ers 3; Chairman Senior Class Publicity Committee. Thesis — The Little Theatre Movement. Ft. Atkinson Jay Earl Newton .v engineering Tau Beta Pi; U V Engineers ' Club. Secretary 3. Presi- dent 4; FVesident Tau Beta Pi 4; A 1 E E Thesis — Study in the Determination of Sounds Under Water Harold incent Nicoll Barron ■i ,ck ' COMMERCE La Socieded Hispania Dc La LInivcrsidad Wisconsin; Commerce Club; Cx)mm«rcc Crew 2; .AdvertisinB Club 4. Thesis — Terminal and Trunk Line Electrification Com- parative Advontaflcs and Disadvantages of Electric and Steam Trarvsp rtation. Evelyn V. Nicolls Wausan Thesis .Arthur Charles Nielsen Bcrw n. Ill ENf.INF.ERINt; Sifima Phi. Tau Beta Pi lita Kappa Nu; Scabbard and Blade; Iron Cross; Varvuv Tcnnl 2 3. 4. C ' jiptam 2. 3. 4. Bosket I3iill I Lieutcnur.i 2. Capluin i, Cj.lonel 4. U W. C C . ProRrum Ciimmmec Mihuiry Ball 2. 3. Advisory Chairman 4. Student Senate 4, ( hairmiin l-.xecutive ( ' om- mittcc. J ludent CtKjncii ol X■fen e. ( laN C immittee 4, Committee 4. Tennis Club 2. 3. 4. President 3. 4. Thews — Anjilcctric Water Softener. GusTAVE J . Noel . . Cast Cuj PHARMACY Thesis — Prlroxollus of the NatKinal Fontnilory and Simi- lar VIcdicatKMU Prepared in England aixJ Ccrrruiny. Ruth D. KoER Woftc-n HOME ErONfAIICS Alpha Phi. Monar Board. Glee Club I. 2. Y W C: A Cabinet ). 4. Thesis Industrial Diseases of Women TIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIM IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIinilMllllllli; IIMIMIIIMIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlilMlllllllllllllln i I ' l-I ' ( ' .LAmii Nol. II-. Duvi-nlvrl, la LIHKARY S( HIK I. lluM -ChilJrin ' .SI..rlc (rem Slviktspcarc Pai 1. Odin viii s Chit f mo I ' alh A ' .RICl Lll Rli tuciu;(:ilip|-K.«a illk t;iul . Ircasunr 3 IhiMs— A Slud of DciiK.nvt Tilt ions in . ..nl.m hv f-ountv Agriculture Rcprcvcntativcs Iakii lill.l.l N O Brii-.n Port ashin ,lon LimKRS AND SCIENCE Alpha Gamma Dilla; MiUaukci-Dcmncr C .I1ckc 1. nicM-— A liricf Studv c.( the Narrative Prove I-icticm of KiplinK and f...nrad vnth a Resume of M.Oern Cruieal Judgment of their W ' ritinB i I x 1 Oi SHi-iSKV Kenosha ■Ok- COMMERCE ( lommeree C:iulv Ihesis— A Reconciliation of the ConlliclinB Doctrines in Acct untin« and Laxfc on the Suhjtxt as to A ' hat ( ..msii- lules Profit ' iciOR A. Olson tarincltc -wcr ■oit- (HLMICAL ENC.INEERIN . (Chemical linRineennc Socictv; Minstrel Sllow 2 IhcMS ' -The Time Factor in the Lime and S la Kver W aler SolteninR Process 1 ' ran 1 s Mary OMallev V iji i.s, n ■7-u(. HOME ECONOMICS Ihesi- -l-.fficiencs of Pasteuri:ati.in of Milk ( 4 ARA I-. Opper WVyaidiv a •■a ire LEIIERS AND StIENCE (:arrollC.olleRC I I hesis-A 1 fislory of the Ptxir Relief l.a s of W iseonsin ' l RNON . Pa( KARD C llcO£c1 l Kkcy- ( OMMERCE IXIta Llpsilon. Scublvird and Blade Monastics liaduer li..ard I. 2. J. Business Manauer l ' l|8 linducr. I ail Cjir- dinal Business Staff 2. C.lce ( luh I. tlhuirman S,.ph Pipe A.mmiitce.(:hairmanMenv.riaK,.)mniittee4.R 1 C Captain 4. I iilomathia. Student ( tnterence 2 Ihesi Merchant Murine Pi iRi Ml IV Paine MduMikiv ■ iht- HOME It ONOMIl S IVIta IXIta IXIla. (.Imicn.n Nu . l-utlienics Cluh I hesis — tius Analysis of l- ' enlicntalioit Pn lucls of N ' avN Beans lioNA A. Parker Eaton. Ohio IE I VERS AND S lENl !■; KapiMi Alpha I hela. I ' ljirlham ( ' .i llrKe I . V ' assur ( ' ..illcKc 2. I lusis Ki itantie Mii cincnt in l-iindxaise I )iirLlcntn)t iiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiMllillMliliiiiiiiiiii iiiiMiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir; rot. . ' • Jiiiiiiiitiiiiiiniitiiinintiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiniiitn Miiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiti H(:i I N EiiZAHi til Parkinson Madison ■Parkic HOME RCONCIMICS Kappu Kapr a Cammn; [V) hlinK. C ' -uptuin 1. V W A A ; Women ' s Alhl«ic Edil.ir I I8 BiiJucr. Vici-IVi-sidcru ..I C:ioss 2: AssiMonl Prom Chuirman 1. Eulhi-nits f.lub 2. 1. V ' lcc-Prestdtmt 4 Thesis — Tlislory of the Tmuscr ond the Sux-kinK. Florence Partridge C iiai ' i LETTERS AND SCIENCE Northwestern Universitv I. 2 Thesis— Welfare Work in War industries I AMES Alfred Peachv .... ■Jtm- MECHANICAL EN ;|NEERINC; 1 4. U. W Band Norma Lents Pearson .... Btoominglon LETTERS AND SCIENCE Thesis — The Development of the Embr ' osac of (Vnothcra •Arthlr George Percande Ceclarhur): ■An- ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Orchestra I Thesis — Current Wave F ' orm in the Secondary Oinduetors of a Squirrel Cage Irxiuction Motor. Mynie Glstav Peterman hrriU Rowing I ; Crew 2 ; Glee Club I ; Sergeant Military ' Corps 1. Hesperia 2. . 4 Thesis — Effects of Low Concentrations of Certain Toxic Cases. Avis Marie Peters .... HOME ECONOMICS Alpha Omicron Pi Madison Thesis — The Mistory arxJ Development of Chain Stores. Arthi ' r J. Petersen Racine medicine Esther Peterson Racirn: Ptttson ■. letters and science GIfb ' Glee Oub I. 2: Mott CnnfererKe Committee 3. I AMES D. Peterson . . Minncafwhs. Mmn ■■P«. letters and science rr ck I. 2. J. -W ; Secretary of C:iav. 2; Secretary of Athletic Board - of MiniKapolis ' 11 f . ■••• w f : ' Ti niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiititiiiiiiiitititiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiitiiiiiir: UlllliMIIUII-ii Miiilltl :M!IMMIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|I1 llxKldS CiHdW Pi I r A Ui lAcVl III lliRS ANO S(JtNCE Phi Kappa Sinii ' .ji, Wtncinii. MinncN tlo, Normal 2; l-rcnth ( luh 4 IhcM — laJs and l-a Llc .,f the I wcniicth C;i-nlury ( i AF(FN i: M PiircLPS, Jr DoJe I.KTIERS AM) S ,II;NC.E cguialion of Comix-nvition Mari.ahi 1 NiimiKM Pic KIT I Shihoygan ijii ILRS ANT) s :ii;v( I-: CoRDia lA (.1 i;Mf:M Pii:r(.f. .... aiikish Cotdtt LETTERS AND SCIENCE Alpha Xi Delta; Carroll CoIIcrc I, 2; Twelfth Night Oranialic Cluh 3. 4; Union Vodvil 3. 1 hcMb— Shaws Women. John Jami s Pink Oconomoucc LEIIIRS AND SLIINlh loLA liLiZAUliii PoiiiE BUwninilcn Poh-le ' LETTERS ANB SCIENCE W A A : InJiwr Ba elvill 3 . W uhzheda Camp l-irc. 1 reus- urer 2. Seerelurv 4 I he-M — Studies of the AsperBiPus and Penitillium I ' orms • Ndilaide Grace Porter . fU ' l LETTERS AND SCIENCE -Stevens Point Normal I. 2 I hesis — C nrad I ' erdinand Me er s Woman ( ' haracte Mary E. Porter A ui n.vi LEI IERS and S( IENCE Kappa Kappji(.iimma lliesls— Iheliallad 111 I IS D. Pol IIR Madtson LEI II RS AND Sl.ll-NCE I rench Pluv 1. 1.4. |..int Dehotc 3. 4 Mespcria 1, 2. 3 4 Ihesis— I ' apcrs on the Irench P.«ts of the l ' )lh Ccnlury. ( I ARI N I .Xl I ' l.RI Pol IIM.LR h ' t. Alkllhwn •.«( ■ I I It. IKK Al I Nt.lNI ERINl. IhcluXi. Ita Kappa Nu. I V ({nHinccrN ' Clulv Miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii: u . ler . 0 «7 m V %0  . • i -lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMMIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIUillllUIIIIIIIIIMMIMIIIIIIIIIIIIillMlliMiiiKHMIIlllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIL Mary liiiiKN PowicRS MamU ' n LtrrKRS AND si:ii:Ncr. S G A . I. 4 Thcsii— Lconiiniic CorKiui.mv in irKiniu Iri.m I8t 5 u. 187J. KsillKR . M PrISION lirCiUhad LLirt.RS AND St;il-NCE Thcsii — ' ord orth ' : Relation to the Politico of MnglanU Mary Eli:ai L1H Prl ' ett . . Lcs Angilcs. Cnl B4lly ' JOURNALISM Alpha Omicron Pi: Ward Belmont 1.2. Daily Cardinal 3. Wiscorvsin Litcrar MaKa:inc 3. 4; Badger Board 4. Scfxip-. Club 3 . Press Club 4 : Spanish Club 4 ; .Xdvertismd Club 4 Thesis — .Appeals of Hiiiihtecnth Century Papers to Woir.en Irving .Alfred Plchner EJgar ■Puck JOURiNALlSM LawrcrKC College 1.2. Thesis — Washington Newspapers as Government (.Vgans. .Ar.mand J. Qlick Theresa C.HE,MISTRV COURSE Phi Beta Kappa; Phi Lambda Upsilon; Philomathia; Sophomore Scmi-Public Debate. Thesis — On the SuKvtitution of Ammonia for the Ciilorine in the Benzine Nucleus. Maeel a. Raimey Milwaukee LETTERS AND SCIENCE Milaaukee Normal School 1.2. Thesis — Crittcum of John Ruskin ' s Econcmic Definitions. Charlotte Rose Rath lmonJ PHARMACY Thesis — Women in Pharmacy. Frank J Ratty Laona MEDICINE ' alparai?o University 1. ThcMS — Experimental Palholog . ISACORE ReiCHENBAUM M Uuaukee Don COMMERCE Thou — Ccmpftition Between Rcudy-made and lailor- madc Ckitho. CoROlHY Ev.MA Reid Oconcmcwcc RtiJy- letters and science Chi Cmtga: Phi Beta Kappa Treasurer Blue Drag - ._ -„_. , . - . - , _ _ agoo 4. W A A . Sophomore Bowling Team; C«stalia. Sopho- more Honors Thc« — The Vlicr«9(eri«s Flora o( Wixonsin. nllllllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIItllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIiniMIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlin Pan 19 .IIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIMIMi ' IlllllllllU il!llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll!£ | M I i; Run Huric lliiMI. 11 OVOMK S lnd  .r lia -cKilM, uld..ir H:i-ihull I, V A A; Ku- rhcsiv-C..,mervati..n u( l ' .. WuM. T-inM I AMI s RiKinrs t;OMMF.Rr;P. L f Bank Acc iums 111 UN Rid 1 Plaicv E-sthcnillc. loua Milan. A . ' HOMl; KtflNOMICS I lardin CJ.ikKt. Miss-Kiri. 2. liuthcnics J. 4; SuffraRc 3. 4. ■l W C; A 3 : rx nsumcrs ' LcuRui- 3, 4 I hcMs —The I£fTcci iii Temperature on ihc DiRestion of I .; ; White Makidn Ei.AiNK RicP. Chicago ■Laney LKTTERS AND SCItrNrK Hum — IVo kninB ' Interest in Crime i HI Ki lA Ri( HARDS Hannthal, Mo. ■Wahhy LI ITERS AND S II NCI- (lamma Phi Beta. SufTraRe UaRUe 3. ' l ' W C A ; lllee ( lub 1 Iami s Marsion Richardson , Kansas C ' l .v. Mo. COMMFRCE SiRina Alrha l-p ilon: O.mmercc Club; 1ona tics BadRcr H..ard :. I. BuMne-v ManaRer Union Wxlvil 4. Manaccr (ilee and Mandolin Clul 3. 4; Lieutenant L ' V C C. Chairman HomeeominR Ball 4 • I heMs — .omparatiNe PurthasinR Melhtids noROIHV Rir:TBR T K LttTTIiRS AND SCUKNCl; ICiHPi. Gi-;nk ii: Ti Rindy .... A ii. i.vi ' G,v - I inTI-RS AND SCIIINCE-; Wahrheda. C ermaniMi.sehe l esellsehafl . I ' rcnch C.luh. Ok.aBmii Risiow .■ . liUuk Kivcr halls (He- I l-ITPRS AND S .irNl i: la t:m-sr Normal Seh...! I. 2 lheM — :hic(JoNephor the Ncr I ' erec Indians, Iami s l-RANK Riilii Ris Shtillshirf; I NC.INI 1 RINl, I ' l lau SiRmii. I ' reMdcnl 4. I iiu Bcia Pi. Amcriean Sxrielv o( Mcihanital l-.nRincers. iee Presldcnl 3, PreMdcnt 4. I nivctsitv (irthrstta 2 I. 4, C V KeRimcntol Band I. 2. 1 4 I irulcnani C ( ( 4 IhrMN Ihc InvrMiualioK ol Vihrulions in Imernul Com- nnii •iiiiiiiMlllllllllllliliillllllllllllllllllllliiiiiiiiiiiiiMiii iiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiin jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii! iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiu MxRCARur Roberts CamhnJ HOME ECONOMICS Alpha Comnw Delta, liuthcnics Club. Y. V. C A ; Con . lM EniiM RoHiNSiiN . . Duliilh. Mm •Hah ' LETTERS AND SCIENCE Kapi (i Alpha Thcta. RiickforJ College I. 2; L nion V kI viM ThcM — The Karly HisU.ry of Duluth, Mninesotu Mari.aret Ann Robinson GranJ Raf Us. Mi, ■Rohhs HOME ECONOMICS Kappa Kappa Gamma. W .-V A . Indix. r Ba el-ull. Archcrv Thesis— Ha-i EnRland .-VcccptcJ the Mo.nriH: tXictrme or is She Pursuing a Policy of .AnglivSaxon Supremacy ' Alfred Moore Ror.ERs Chur. Af LETTERS AND SC.IENCE Delta Tau Delta. Inner Gate; Friars. Golf Team. Oipta.n ); Freshman Letters and Science Oew. EJwin Bixrth Secretary 2. Property Manager EJwm Botith-Rcsd DomiP ' Production 2; Chairman Floor Committee Sophomor. Dance Thesis — Fluctuation of Assets and Liabilities of Banks t(.- First ' I ear of War Llcv Ell. RojERS Kimhc LETTERS AND SCIENCE Hockey 1; W .-X : Casialia. University Press Cluh Thesis— Rudyard Kipling as a Modern Ballad Writer Margaret Gertrude Ro:;ers . . Ltste, ; HOME ECONOMICS Monar Board. Keystone; W A A Pin: 1 ' . V. C . Cabinet I. 2. J. 4. President 4. Thesis — Methods of Prescr inR and Marketing Home an. Farm Garden Products. Dorothy Ross AfifiLi. Dum LETTERS AND SCIENCE Lawrericc College 1, 2. T ' hesis — Health Legislation in Wiscorwin Herbert H. Ross Mthrauk ACRICULTIRE Eva L. Rossiter :• -Ere- Lt-TTERS AND SCIENCE Mary ToRREV Rol ' DEBUSH . . Memphis. Tcnn MEDICINE .2.  c V ■f ■ tm ts V f i f ' f:: Injcciion ( Baccilut Hodgklru Vaccines nilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMIMIIIIIIIIIIIIilllllllllllllllilMlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli I Pu r 11 A iintlllHIMIHIIi ' lilllMIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIin.iniMIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIMMIIIIIIIi: ' «. i r (% V 5. r 1 V : ( : , t hJf ■- pr i « 4 ' i IS R i [ ttlu ankt ' c ML X HANK AL 1 NGINEKRlNl, i«m.i Alphii I-.p il ' in. Pi lau Sinma: VarMty Tennis V IhcMs-L ' sc o! ' CcntnfuRJil (- ' orcc in Manufacture of Con- crete l ,r .-- Mi Roi mke;i; HOMI-. PXONOMICS Milwaukcc-OwncrCollcRc 1. 2 I hcK.s— A Study of Ropincss In Bread. i iZAHiiH Rovt.r ytaJison ■• ).•((%■ I.IRRARY SCHOOL InivcrMtvof lown I I lieMs — A biudv o( the Crltici-.m of Thomas Hardv ' s Xovelb. .(.I BORC. liLIZAHITIl RuDD .... Kcnosha Inky ' LETTERS AND SCIENCE IXIta Delta tXlia; W A. A : Bowling I. J: Hockey 3. 4: Track ?; Class Committees 2. 3; C insumcrs ' LcaRue; 1 W. C A I hesis — A Survey of the (Commitments to the Kenosha I ountyjaii from I ' I2-I ' )I7 . II HI i 1 1 Ri i-.iiL iMadison MtiDICIN : Iheta Chi. I hes.s— I he Pr. luction ol I yphoid I ever in Rabbits. I i 1)1 I-- Rl i i ' La C ' roxsc PIIARM.VCY I a Crosse Normal School I I hesis— T he Clultivation oi Medicinal I ' lants. M.VII AE InCI RSOll. RVAN Ccix LETTERS AND SCIENCE Janesvilli: I I i n R AN .... .Vi uf i KiiKfeiinnii 1 Nt. lNI ERINl. lunvARO Sahi Rll.U.EN .ShcTlJon. ' . ■Salt INt.INT l-RINt; I hcMs— I Icat I reatment ol Slccl lliiMI It ONOMK S Kapi-va Atplm I het iiiiiilliliiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiillMIMMIIIIIIIlHi illllllll •..I. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir ailllllllllllllllllllllllllMMIIIMIIIMnilllllMlllllllllllllllllli illllllllllltlllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllli: Marian E. Sanford La Crosse LETTERS AND SCIENCE Ku|- po Alpha Thrta; S. G A Board J l ' hoi — A Comparison of Schiller ' s Junnfrau yon Or- leans with Anacolc France ' s Life of Joan of Arc, Gi ms Marguerite Sapp . . Prmccicin. Ill Sapfy ' LETTERS AND SCIENCE Alpha Phi; WarJ Belmont College. Tenn . I; Co-ed Cur- Otis W. Saunders Oconto l- ' alls Sondy MEDICINE Delta Iota; Lawrence College I, 2. Thesis — Topographical Anatomy. EsTELLE Julia Sawyer Raci- LETTERS AND SCIENCE Delta Gamma; lilwaukee-D wner College I. Thesis— The Effect of Bodily Patigue L ' n A ' lsual .Acuity. Marian E. F. Sc nuvn Prairie du Chi LETTERS and SCIENCE La Crosse Normal School 1,2; Senior French Club 4. Erich George Schalkhauser . . Logamd Schatk ' letters and science Wartburg College I. 2. 3. Thesis — Wireless Telephony. Garnetta E. Scheid ' Madi Carney HOME ECONOMICS Omicron Nu; Eulhenics Club. Thesis — Drying Fruits and Vegetables. . rmand Robert Schiller ... Miiuaui Jake LETTERS AND SCIENCE Phi Kappa Psi. Skull and Crescent; Yellow Helmet. ii ' itv DaMhall 2, J. 4; President Inter-I ratcrnitv Bucket ' rwll League 4; hlarcsfooc 2. 5. 4. Secretary 4; Shakcipcar c;in Pageant 2; Chairman Miisic Committee Junior Pron-. I he agcan 1 Vodvil 3. 1— Schiller. Life and Works. 1 RENCE V. Schmidt Briltion ENGINEERING Thesi — Survey of Magnet Design P iL Herman Schmidt Hoiman riirMirxi rvniNTFRiNr: tiluaukt-- illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMI IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMMIIIII Paie 91 iillllllllllllir: i illllllllMIIMi ' ililllM illllllllll illilllllMIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIi I ll UBI RT Waliir S(HMn: y i ft ' « ■ • 1 V %0 i « r7 - m 4 ' m ' ■■ m ■ii ' k LI 1 11 KS AND M lINf i; — Phi Hcia Pi Pill liiiii K.ippii. Siionu Sinmu. r W Hand 1, : Licuunam L V C C 2 S irhom..rc llomirs Ihcsi ' . — NtTVf Supply of the l.un« E Ii RiLi; S iiN ( Ki NfiE K(. A aJnon 1 ■ My C HOMU li (1NOMK;S 2 Choral L nion ?. Eutluni :- c;iuh -4 ZZ 1 hiM — A Study o( thi- Riliition of l£ducation to aKC of ■ o kln Wnn cn in Drs CixiJ and Five and Ten Cent 2 S ore of Wi-cn-in, Ua-eJ on Stati-lics Gathered b the •• Stale InduMrialt nmrni-Mon • (lAiRi L S mm:ii)i;r A aJist ' i = lilt IRKAI. ENGINI-I RIN(. E SiKnia Alpha Mp ' -ilon, Kta Kappa Nu E 1 hcMS— InveMittalion of the Ci-ntnfueai l- ' orcc Method of Manufaeturinfi ( ' tnerete Pipe 2 Li;i)NA Annii ii; S hm;ider . . Tuv Riierx = ■ Lee ' 3 Ml SIC 2 Alpha Chi Omcija: O.oral L nion. ice-Prtsidcnl of Mumc 2 SurerM-or- 1 ZZ Ihesis— Public Seh wl Music. 1 Rnw ARi ) C St.HRANK Ashhnd i ■ luldic ' E KNCINEKRINT. 3 Awema CJuh; Irack 2; WrestlinR 1: Pootlxill 2. 3. E 1 he-is— TeM of a Lnillovi Enuine i Harkld |. ScHi ' UP.RT Madison 1 COMMERCK E Cadet Sergeant 1 : Cadet 5ierj!eant Major 2. Intensive Drill } . Third Officers ' ' framing Camp. C mp Grant 4 . Crew 1 . 3 r ii Da ' NIEL StiiiLi: Mihiaukcc 1 ■Ctrnumy- S COMMERCE zz Helta I ' psilon. Beta Gumma Sigma; Manager I- ' oolhall 1. ssistant Manager ' arsity 2. 1, Manager Varsity 4. Or- 2 uanizutions Editor Badger ?, Lieutenant R t ' I C — Herbert Gistave Schremer Milwauki - 1 LETTERS AND SCIENCE = Ihcsis— Air and I-:anh Resistance of the L niversiiy Wire- . less Station 1 li.NRY l5A in 5 HI 1 t: .... Aladiwn E LET lERS AND SCIENCE E Mankuto State ormal School. Minn. 1. 2. Germanis. s tischc Gcsellsthult — 1 hesis -Industrial 1 ruining in Indian Schools = Sarmi Cii Hi HI ii: Still STEm Madiscn i I Wfv E 1 LETTERS AND S( TENIAE E 1 Ihcsis Ual:ac the Portrait Painter — illlllllllllllllinilllllllllinilllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIR ' JIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIilllllllllllllllMllllllllllillllMllllli. .iiiiniiiiMiiiiiiMniiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiitiii |S. UUU-E S. S ..H VALHE l l Ull ca l.llllt SchutlUt MUSIC Matic Supervijors; l lhiu; Suffrniic LcnRUc. Socinli f S«uJv C.iuh ' l ' hc l — l lbllc Sch x l MuMC W III i M S .:h vart: ' aukegan. I ■ liilf COMMEWT. ' arsily Basketball 4. Oimmcrcc Finitbull 1. 4. Capuiin 4 Coninwrce Basketball atxl Baseball ?, 4. Lieutenant I ' W C C. Thesis — Reconciliation t f Leftal Decisions Concerning llu Police Rower of the Slate 0 er Corporalions. ElINORE LoilSE Sc.HWEIZER La Cr. ' LETTERS AND SCIENCE Pi Beta Phi; Wellesley Collese 1.2. Mystic Circle; Cli i Club. ' ice-PreMJent 4 Thesis— The Effect of iolet Linht Kays on the Tubeicle Bacillus Dorothy Belle Scott A uMltHx . . letters and science Delta Delta Dclto. Thcta Sigma Phi. Secretary J; Eiowl- inn 1 . C.o-eJ ( arJinal 2 ; Bnditer Board 3 ; Pythia 2.3; Con- sumers ' League 3. 4, l hcMs — The Literary Development of Bdith Wharton. Fern Horton Se vrls Crofii. ' Rapids LETTERS ANT) SCIENCE Castalia 3. 4; S G .A Board 4. Thcsii — . ' V Study of the Commitments to the WixxJ Count ■ Jail. IOI2-I1I7 ' Kl RT L. SeelbaCH .... East CtcelanJ ENGINEERING Pi Tau Sigma. Case School of .Applied Science I; Amen can Society of Mechanical Engineers 3. 4 Thesis— Dicsign of a Power Plant f..r u Community . 25.(X)0. Margaret Devlin Sennett imi Senate LETTERS AND SCIENCE Castalia I. 2. 3. 4. Thesis— History of Maduon. 1850-1880. Lawrence F. Seybolo Forest Junctt Si ' engineering Eta Kappa Nu. U, W, EnHinecrs ' Club Thesis — PerformarKc Test of the Commutating Synchron Mary Elizabeth Shafer Mcrrdl MUSIC Milwaukee Norma) School I ; Choral Union. Thcsu— PuMk $c)woI Music. Tracy Ray Shane Ban,- ' AGRICULTURE Mi ' ii 3 - ' i I ..rr,,.-:N..rm«l School I. 2. Country Mag-i ' ' 3. 4. Agricultural Literary the Siuice III Seepage in tt . urcmcnt of Quantity and I cm jxTdtufc ■! ' f M.. in.( u ater Pfli « A ' niiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilillilliililllllilliliililllillll iiiiiiiliiiiiliiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiliiliiiliir. Pate 9S lllMlllllltllK iillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltiMllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllinilllMIIIIIIIU ll Roir N ' lOioLs Shaw Miluaukee ENCINF.ERINC Milwaukee Normal School 1; L ' . W. Engineers ' Club. I hc-iv — Mifth Frequency Alternator DcsiRn. I- NK William Shkmick .... Marinette Schernicus LAW lau Kappa Epsilon; U. V RcRimcntal Band I. 2. 3. ! lESTER Elmore Smepard . . Oconomowoc ' Vhel ' ENLINEERINC r.f the Mineral .Mhite. 1 LD .XcNES Shepherd lpha Ga . . Plattei ' Mc !.c: lftters ani science Delta; Plattcville Normal School I. 3. Bowl- ea c 1 hcsi — I Icnrv David thoreau the Effect of His RcadinR l in 1 lis Writinc (HN Newion Sherwodd . . Kansas Citv. Mo. ( OMMERt E I hcsis — Development ol Luml r Industry of Lnitcd ' stales uith Special Treatment of Southern Pine. Cvpre s. ,iid Catalpa KeNNEIII CiRINNELL ShIEI.S ENCINEIRING li TauSiBma..A S M 1 Tau Sicma. . S M I-: . Class |-,x)tball I 2 hcMS — Test of VcntilatinB and IHeatinR S stcni of the e Physics BuildinR ' Rliu Shilling ' tn ]tia LETTERS AND SCIENCE IMatteville Normal School I. 2 ! hesis — The Geography and Geology of ' errv. n County IS Filler Si lORiEss LETTERS AND S :iEN(;E lpha Chi Omega : Eastern Illinois State 1 h ' es,s-l lenrv James ' Use of Plot. I SKRAND DaMIIS ShUTTLEWORTH LAW ■ iRGE John Sil ' ernai.el . . ■■.Vi i r- . Charleston, lit I Schcol .MaM. t OMMI R I I 111 Sigma Kappa, l- ' rcshman Ocu . Siplv I badger l jiird ). ' iseonsin Literary Mapirinc J. .Assist- .int .Aslvcnising and Pn gram Manager C ' nion ' odvil 3; Sliakespearciin Open Air Theatre 2 , .Sssistant junior PnMTl 1 haitman I I he-is - llic Pennsylvania Kallnuid Co and Its Propnc- laf . Suhsidiary. . ' Vffiliated. and Controlled Corporations. illllMlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli IIIIIIIIIIIMMIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIMMIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlr I ' atr •J6 llllMIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIMIIinillMHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMMIIIIIIMIIMMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIItlMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIinillll. EbER SiMPSilN. Jr O.shkosI ■Cuh Mi:r iciNE Acacm: Ptit IViu 1 . Irtm Crf ss; Monastics; Stur utv Arn  ; While Sr«dc . c Ih lll 2. ). 4. ' V-; Buskcihull . ' 3. 4. ■AV;l UM.Kall :. 5.4. W ■. ThcMs — To( firapliic Analomy. M :i I A SrMS Kln •. ,■ HOME ECONOMICS Euthcnics Club Thesis— The EITccl o( War .«i V..man in Industry. Martha Oli;a Skaar La Cr LIBRARY SI;H00L Ch OmcRa. La Cn ssc Normal Sch xil I. 2: Castalia; E ccutivc BtwrJ of C nsumcrs LcaRuc Thesis — A Cumparison of the National Bpics of Franci EnftlanJ. and Spain. Agnes Cecelia Skelton Madi ■■Bidd t Ml ' SIC P thia I, 2. 3. 4, President 4: Keystone 4, Glee Club I. : 4. Choral UnKW I, 2. 3. 4; Clef Club 3 T icsis — The Mea.surement of Musical Talent and It .Application in the Teaching of Public School Music Thomas Harry Ske.mp La Crc Tom LETTERS AND SCIENCE La Crosse Normal 1.2. Pigeon Fa Ost- xR Bernard Slettel, nd Kinjt LETTERS AND SCIENCE Phi Alpha Delta. MacAlastcr Collcdc I. 2 Thesis — The History of Trcmpeleau County Allen M. Slighter MaJis. LETTERS AND SCIENCE r-K. iH,, t. .►.►. .,.1 nnd Blade; Lieutenant 2, Captain i 1 4, L: W C C: . Junior Prom Commii r. ' jwnniittcc4; Ca-ncral C ' hairman Mill t.. , l-.ditor |0|0 (ladRcr 1 i-v . i. -siuction of lanfiancse Ira O. Slocumb . ViH.n. (j Ellsworth .Smalley .... Cuba ( LETTERS AND SCIENCE Theso — Federal Ccntrol of Railroads versus State C mtri ' n,- r ' ••■ f- Oi 9 , ■ . 4 ■ ! 1 ! V ' l 1 -9 « ' i : ' ' i J— . . % V : ' , ' Jg M■W( -illlllllllllllUIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIilllllllllllllllllllltllllllllllllllinillllllllliUltlll 7 Pal, t7 IMIIIIMIIIIIill lllllllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllllllillllllllll iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii: 1 li.i.r.N Florence Smith Madison HOME ECONOMICS IhcMN— Hi ' .lorv. Cirovith. and Dcvclcir i ' ' i ' k: ' ' VC unj Icn Com Slurc Katharine Smith Columbus LETTERS AND SCIENCE IhcM ' - — Kingjumi: ' l of Stotlanvl and ihc Puritans PiiiLii ' Harold Smiih Oconto ■■n,r ENCilNEERINC IrranBl.-: l:nKmtcrs- MmstrcU 2 IhiTMs— InvcstiBotion for Propos .-d Water Power Dcvclop- tticnl on the Oconto F ivcr at Oconto. Wiscohmh. 1 Iannah Bicelow Smylie Omaha. ' ch home economics Alpha Phi. Pvthia 1, 2. 1. 4. Hulhcnics Ouh; V A A : Outdoor Haschall I. 3. Indoor Baseball 2. 3. 1 hesis— LX ' eIopmcnt of the N ' isttmg NurM: in Wisconsin. I 1l(.o H. Som.mer Shcbovfian .SGRICL ' LTL ' RE Delta Phi lipsilon. Alpha Zeta; Phi LamWa I nsilon Thesis— The Kstimotion of and the Effect of Heat on the Citric .Acid Content of Milk. Adah P. Spencer Chicago LETTERS and SCIENCE Alpha Phi: Chicago University I: W A A I hesis-Wisconsin Legislation of the P.xir Laws •Sarah A. Spensley Madison Sally- JOLiRNALISM Lheta Sigma Phi: Hlue Dragon. Vice-President 4: Dailv Cardinal I , Woman s Kditor of the Awk 2 3. Satire Staff of the liaJger 2. J: Women Students ' War Work Council 4: Advertising Cluh 4 Class ice-Prcsidcm 4 T hcsis — .-Xmerican Newspaper Women Mildred Si ' RAc.L ' E Si. Joscfyh, Mo. LEI TERS AND SCIENCE Kappa Alpha TTicta; Phi t ta Kappa. Spanish Club. I hcsis — Anatole |- ranec as a Literar Critic I ' l iiRENt.E Mildred Sprecher Madi.wn home economic s micion u Madelyn I£li:aim hi Sian( iuield f ' ond du Lac ■ MMy 11- ITERS AND S IENCI-: Mortiir HiMird. MasclsnII I. 2, ). W A A . lloducr Ikwrd 2. ). 4. Asv,«iutc Editor 1. Art liditor 4: tilcc Club I. 2. Orchestra 2. 1 Icl ( lub 2. 1. 4. Secretory J, President liurniird 4. President Keystone 4 Thesis — Subjects and I echnique of lllustrati rs frum 1850 to I ' do ' iillllllMllltlllllllllllllllllllillllllllllMllllllli IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIR Jlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli .lilllltllllllllllllllUlllllllllllllllliU I RK.NE Foster Staples Osceola PHARMACY Delta Gumma: University of Colorado I. Thesis — Ihe Newer hlaloRen Antiseptics. Anna Lydia Stark MaJiscn MUSIC Thesis— l lbllc School Music. Ida Farr SrARKwi:ATHr:R CHEMISTRY Alpho Ga mma Delta: Ohcrlin CoIIckc 1.2 Thesis — iMilation of Sanguinarium and Ccle Clctetand. O. I from NoR.MA Hoffman Stauffer LETTERS AND SCIENCE Margaret Frances Stevens . . Marg home economics Milwaukee ICC Coll Page 4 ; Keystc Yankton, . D. Yankton College 1.2: Glee Club 3, 4: Euthcnics Cluh 3, 4: South Dakota Club: S G. A. Board. Thesis — Bibliography of Food Hconomics in Current Lit- erature from 1412 to 1917 inclusive. Mildred V. Stewart . Bozeman, Mont •Afif LETTERS AND SCIENCE Chi Omega . Montana State College 1.2: Glee Club 4 : Con- League 3. 4. Thesis — Comparative Accuracy of Methods of Determin- ing Lactose in Milk William iVI. Stewart Chicago -Bud letters and SCIENCE Delta Kappa Epsilon: Inner Gate. Thesis — Intercorporate Relations (Between Railways and Industries. OiMi ' i I Rhea Stier . Whiteivater Dimla LETTERS AND SCIENCE I ,„,,.,„,, ,.1 V lhe  Ruth Lucille Stolte Reeiisturi: ■ Hu ui letters AND SCIENCE Alpha Phi. Mortur Board, Red Gauntlet. Iic.i-ui r 2. Cardinal IVwrd ol Control !. 4. President 4. Class Vice- President !. Smul Chairman Barnard 2. Y M C A Cjihi- net 2. ). 4 . Prcidcm of C jin-umers League 4. U W Coun- cil of Defcr sc. Vice-President 4 Thesi — The Oevelopment of the Cjire of the Amert FV r. Gerald Daum Stone Sun Prainc J try commerce ( ii l hi. Ciaw and College Ba.sketball 2. 3. 4. I-ldwin Booth, flarcsfoot 2. President Inter-Fraternity Bowling League 4 Thesi- ' ' 1 ' ■- . -,: ' ■• ' ,- : I .■ lories Tiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iltllllMllllllli ' l iMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiii ' niiiitiiiiiiiiiiliniMMlllllllllllllllllliMilMililliii ' .:: Ri( MAKi) Mil ION SioRiiR IXi Moinc.s. Iowa i:ni.im-.e-.rinc I ' hi ntllii I luta. Alpha Chi SiRma I ' hc-i Ihc Pr xiuclii.n of a Bbmc Rifractory for Optn- I kurth I ' urnaco from Vl .-onMn Linit-iom- M l.i rwri-LYN Stolt Rice Lake Slotilie ' HOME rt.ONOMICS Siphoniorc Spnnn Spree   mmitlee 2 luilhenics C luh 4. I heviv A StuJ% ..( ihe ReialKin of ICdutulion Ir. WaRCs of WorkiriR Women in (he KniUinK rraJe in Vl n in Hii iJ on Stjili-tic (imhercJ hv llie Stale InduMrial Cx,m- Jtineau Ralph Glnn Si ;hi£r Pcona. III. LAW Ikta Iheta l i, Uradlcv I ' olvtcchnic Institute I. 2 Ihesis— Ihc Influence Of the Pre-.-, Durinn the Civil War. GioRci: 1 1i;nry Stl kbi :r AGRK I LTLRK i hi SiKma Kappa: I laresf(x)t : Chairman Class Music (U mitlce ). LI V RcBimcntal Hand 1,2,?. 4, Second l.i tenant 3. First Lieutenant 4 ITiesis— I ' m form Oeamcrv and Cheese I ' aetorv l.ict Diihtique. Iowa , nc.f.la HoKi: Sl ' LLI AN ■,Vi, v ' Ll-ITTERS AND SCIENCE C amma Phi Beta, Badger Board 3, S pliomore Oimmit- tee, SufTrawe C ihinet J, 4. I-Vcnch Cluh J Thesis — Localism of American Short Stories ) AMI S )aV .SWENDSON ■ mhlTSl Sue.le mrdk:ine Phi Beta Pi. Laurence ColleRe I. 2. L W ReiJimental ' Band J ' l hcMs — The KITcct of Acute and Chionic Inllaminatorv Processes of the Sino-.Aui icular Ni de on Cjirdiac Rhylhni I ESSIE I ' aher - r ' i«. InJ. LETTERS AND StTENCE Phi Mu. Lniversity of Southern Cjilifornia 1.2 I liesis — A C ' omparison [between ( Vdipus Ke ' and Kinn i;i.soN Bo Tan Canlon. China CHEMICAL ENGINEER INC. President Internatiitnal C ' luh 4. President (Tiincsc Stu- dents ' C!luh 4; t!hemical FnRineerinn Society. Cross- ( jiuntrv 2. S imminR T 4. Soccer. I. 2 4. Captain R O I C 4 I ' hesis- Study of a I-crro-Silicon Allo Cm (.11 I I llll-.MAN . JkH v HO.MI; I ' ONOMK S I niycrsiiy ofChicimo I. 2 1 ( ARl ' S ( JIARl I s I IIIIMI liarahoo ,Soulh Mtluaiikcc LAW Iheta Chi. Pi Kappa l Ua. Ripon Collcue I. 2. Con- ureHiilioniilist Students ' As tciiitio ' i President 1 lus„ Aimruan Sl lercs of Inllur.Ke in the I ' ar l-jl« IIMHMIIIMIIMMIIIIIIIMIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIi iillMIIIIMIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIinilllllllllllllllllMlllllltllMllillllllllli fat ' 100 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiriiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiKiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiii).: Oloa C TiiaMi ' SDN RiiiT I ' lilt i.Ki ii-RS AND sc:ir:Ni;r-: RiviT l-.ilK Normal ScIkh.I 1. 2. Ai nrRiA MARtiAKl-.i Tni ' S Fcntl Ju la, ■PctC l.l-iTKRs AND  ii;N(:i; Thesis — Companvtn tif VcrHtlS nnd Lucretius ' AtliUiJc Touurd Animals Marv Mar ;ari;i Tom-) Cincinnati. V ■Toddy HOMK ECONOMICS Kappa Alpha Thcia; L nivcrsity ot Cincinnati 1, 2, ThcMS — ' I he History of the Button and L5utti n Industry in the United States Martin O. Tosterud . . Caledonia. Minn •Tosly ENGINEERING Alpha Chi Stpma ITicsis— The Relation of the Loss on Isnition of Soils to the Nitrogen and Carbon Content. John TuAirrMANN New Richmond GOMMERCT-: Hcspcria 2, J: Commerce Club. Treasurer 1. 4; Sopho Commerce Crew. Sophomtire Semi-l- uhlic Debate ErwinC. Trumpf Madison ■En COMMERCE Chi Phi. Commerce Club. Friars ' Club Thesis — A (Ajrcha.sinR System for the State Frank Thomas Ticker Mduaiik, ■ ' Tommy ■ JOURNALISM Beta Theta Pi Thesis — AJvcnismR and the Railways ' ScllinR Problem. Rlih Anna Tufts Vi( it ' . ' yum LETTERS AND SCIENCE Alpha OmKron Pi, Mil -aul«cc ' [ iwncr CollcKe 1. 2 Thesis — The Covet nmcnl of the Philippine Islands Since l )00 Harold G. Tuft-i Ikdmh. .Mmn Ruth Turner lU-hron. Ill •■H«.i Ml -.11 roLIRSL track I. tJximl Unkio 1. J. illlllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllltllllllllli illllUlllllllli iHiiiiiiiiiiiiti riiiiiiiitiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinn (iMiiiih f ■n f i Akmano J TLTliLR La Crosse I col LAW IXIlu Phi lipMl.jn Gi Ni : A A TwEjiLS IwRansfwrt. Ind. 1 IBKARY ! IIOOl. Im:z [Idna L ' PCRF-N Rncr I ' atl.s LETTKRS AND SCIKNCK River FulK NWmal Sch.ol 1, 3, CkrmaniMi chc Osdls- Oiiio Jacqles Lrix-II Mduauk CHKMISIRY CClRSi: Alrha Chi Sigma IhcMs — ITie Dctcrminulion of l-illcrs in ' ulcani:cU Rul Miriam ander Bii; Han Claire LETTBRS AM) SCIFNCK Kappa Alpha Thcta: Lawrence CJ.IIeKc i. 2 ThcMs — I he Numbvcr o( Commitmenls in the Oiuntv Jails o( Wisconsin Bctvieen 1907 nnJ l ' l WiiilAM J. ' andi;nbi;r(. Madison MI.DICINt; Phi Beta Pi: Sigma Sigma Ihesis— An X-Rav Study of the Gall liladder Louis ' an Ermen j .vn flay ■■ .in ' ENt.lNEERIST. l.umMn Chi Alpha: Ueloit C .llege 1. 2, Chemical Engi- neers ' S _icietv 4 Leslie W . an Naita PlalUiille (OMMERt E Plattcville Normal Sch x)l I. 2. Track 1. 4. Signal t rps. I ' S Armv • Thesis -A Studv of the C isl of Delivery Service in the Retail (Ir.Kerv iVismess LiiiEL an Wart livansvillc HOME ECONOMU S wWJK ' s;;. « . I RNi; N ' lNi.ENr arm;v .... Grtvnuwd . ' ' V vr 1 , • ' ■ At.Rlt.lll.ri ' RE iJt ' ' ' Alpha taimma Rh.., lr..n;Cniss ScahKird and Hliidc: ]-.  ■ l.ieulenant 2.( aptain Mai..r4. H W lH . M C. A. jlhincl 2. I 4. President 4, . ' sludenl Senate, President 4. - - - ' -■ Ihcsls -Slate Applitali..!! of the Sniith-llughcs hill iiiiiilillltllltltlllllllllllllllllllllllllinillMMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIl :i||llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll IIIIm: llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll ' . ' loSKPll Re. iori i£rnon .... Madison ■Rex- F.N(-.INEI£RlNi-. Zcta INi . ' I ' uu Bcio Pi . C hi Gamma Pi Thesis — An Inveslipiilion of the CcntrtfuRnl Force Mclhtxl of Manufacturmg CA)ncrctc Drainage Pipe. 1. 1 ' F.i.L.A Frances VoiGT NORMAL COURSE Oconomouix Alpha Xi Delta: Milwaukee Normal School I. 2: Castalia 4; GermanistischeGc cllschaft 3, 4, Equal SufTraRc L.caRUe; CorLsumers Lcasue. Thesis — Auzcngrubcr. Iaryann S. Vose Macomb, III. LETTERS AND SCIENCE Delta Delta Delta. Kn.« GolleRc I. 2. Thesis— The Virginia Plantation of 18(H). as C HARLiNE Marie Wackman .... Oregon ■Batt ' LETTERS AND SCIENCE Twelfth Night: Junior Play 3; Castalia: Union Vodvil 3. 4: Senior Play Committee 4. Thesis — One Act Plays. William .Allen Wai ker Racine ■BiU AGRICULTURE Alpha Gamma Rho: Ag K«xjtball: Livestock Club: C-lass Football Thesis— Hi.story of the Milking Shorth..rns. George Earl W ' allis Rochester LETTERS AND SCIENCE Chi Phi: Scabbard and Blade: White Spadc-s: Sigma Delta Chi: Daily Cardinal . ' thlctic Editor 3, Managing Editor 4: Lieutenant and Cjiptain U V C C 1. 2. 3. Militan. liall 2. 3 ._l ublicity 1 17 Homecoming Thesis — Effect of the Civil War Upon the Presentation of News as Shown by New ' ork Newspapers. Dora M. Walser LETTERS and SCIENCE Iowa State Teachers ' College 1. 2 ollcgc 1. Thesis — The Relationship Eictwe Ballads. A arfi.TOn the English and Danish Helen Walsi i 1 1I. II (INDMK ,S Barton Kerr Warner COMMERCE Charles Law Warner Chuck CHEMISTRY Alpha Chi Sigmn: Fnnr. Beloil Dccorah, Iowa Decor ah, Iowa Ihv riiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Pjtr 10 I iillllll llllllllllllllillllllin:ii. ' iiiillllilllllllllllllllllllllllinillllllllllllll ' :: John CiF.virNi Warner MaJisoi A(.RIf.ULTURE Delta Siumrt lilm. AKnink 4, AdvcrliMnn; ManaRcr of The (.ounirv Manaiinc 4. A(j InlcrcollcRiatc Dc-balc J. Illi- nois Dchatc 4 ITiesis— A Sludv ( ihi- Market Conditicins of Swine l iAN ARNKR Chicat:o LI- ITI-RS AND SCH-NCU Delta Delta IXUa: Wvslvnx 2. ?HiK;kcy 2; W A A 3. 4 I ' hcMs— Ihc (Vsancation of l uhlic Opinion with Refer- ence to the Grejit War Anna l.rcii.i.F Warren Barahao UETITRS AND SCIENCE Delta Delta Delta; Pythia I. 2. 1. 4: (.nnsumers ' Lea ue ThcMs— I he GeoBraphy of Sauk C ' l l ATHARlNr. C. Washbi RN . . ' eif Ycrk Ctly normal ( Ol ' RSE New York Teachers ' TraininK Schix)l I. 2; Ec. cietv; International Government tjroup, Fo C. A , SulTraKe LcaRuc I hcsis — linRlish Lalxjr Market Dunns the W Eleanor E a Weiiieniixler iiigl land LICni-RS AND StIENi E Platteville Ni rmal School I. 2. Germanistische Ccsells- chaft Thesis— Des olk in Schiller ' s Dramen I i!3ai ' eim(: Weimar La C ' mxc LETTERS AN:i SCIENCE I .1 Crosse- Normal Sch.K.1 I ; tarls ' Glee Cluh 4. Clef t:iub ' ■ Germanistisch ! hesis Co iiiiT W Werdin Chicago 1 111 IT ' S AND St.lENi:!-: lpha. i Delia. Northwestern Llnivers.tv 1 . 2 . l ' W C A. ■ihmet Council, Chairman of Eight Weeks Cluh. SulTraae 1 rasue. Consumers ' l eaKue, ( ' hairman 4, Economics Clun I hesis— Cmimitments to Wisconsin Jails. I RV Esllll R WESSIN..ER . Du ll l. A lll t LETTERS AND SCIENCE Mphu Chi Oniena. Track I . Consumers ' EeaRue i hesis — I lisiory and IX-vclopment of Duluth. Minnevita. Ill WlMMORE Jani-x ' tllt NORMAL ; 1URSE A hitewater Normal Sch.«il 1. 2 Ihesis -liovernor Harvey 1 1 REN( E l- ' ULO WlllEEEN , . Slwboygoi LAW I ' hi IX-lto Ihcla. Anus I hcMs — iiiUtriCiil l cvclt)| iiicni of l- ' ruud und Mi lakc at l.iiu tv in l- )Uiiy. uiHiuiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiinnuaHiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiniiiuiiniiittiiiiinMiniiifiuMiiiiiiuiMiiiMiiiu Poff 104 -tllllllilllllll ;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiMliliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliMitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMii(iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiti: Marti lENA Whipple MaJis l-KTTURS AND SCIENCE Cleveland J. White ShuUshur ' Clfff . Sifiv MEDICINE Phi Beta Pi. U V Rcnimcntiil Band 2 Thesis — TopMKruphicut Anatomy Leon Oti i-:r White llcnJtTson. . ( •W iiio- letters and scien e Thesis— Tht: l .liticiil Sienificancc ..I l -Jtral Ownership i ( Railways in the L niieJ States Marcl ' s D. White . Si. Louis. A . Mork MEDICINE Phi Beta Pi. Kappa Alpha Thes is— The Relation of the Manufactu Gas to the Health of the Workman Oli e a. White Maclison letters and science P ' thia 1 . 2 . Clef Cluh 4 ; Freshman-SophonKire iVli.scr : Junior Pmm jsic and Sonps as Used in Shakespeare. 1 ■■■} -«♦ V Robert Bruce White •Boh W7i.7f engineerinc Phi Kappa Sisma: Wisconsin EnRi WilmctU: III 2. liditor-in-Chief 3. 4; Student Senate 4; Class Ojmmittees 3; U. W. EinRi- necrs ' Cluh 3. 4. Thesis — InvcstiRation of Vibrational Disturbances in High Speed Engines Ja.mes Lowell Whittet letters and science Edgerloi ffii and Money Market Nina Mary Wickwire Alaquokcla. lou LETTERS AND SCIENCE W A A 3. 4; Iowa Club Thews — Atmosphere and Locale in Hawthorne. Paul S. Widman Jefferson ■Paulii ' COMMERCE Thcus — Cose Discussion of Inherent DistirKliuns Between Partncnhip and Corporate l-orms Jacob C. Wilberscheid ' aUUr. LAW Stevens FViiru Nonnal 1 , 2 Thcsi! — Rules of Criminal EvidcrKC. that Due to Chang- ing Condiiiom Have Lost Their Usefulness and Sh«Hjld Therefore be Abrocated  i IliilUiiillilltllllillllllllllllMllllllllllilli A IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIH ntlllllli. Si AR(.1M Pi:aH()Iiv Willi Chtca,i;o AGKICLLTURE Mphii I jiu OniiRa. Alph.i Ida. Dtlla Siuma Rho White SpiJi-. ScalM jird anj BlaJi-. Phili.mnlhia. Asnink: The ( ..unlrvMauazmc, . -v«;iatc tditor 4. StuJcnt St-nali- 3. 4; (aplainl Mauir 4 l C C. . Ar Imcrci.llcKintc IDc- halc 2. (:i..M.r i; An AsMKiatum. Irc-a uriT 4. Imtrcol- IcKiatc IX-balc 4, A II. LARD S. W ' lLDUR F.NCilNEERINC 1 1 W Hn(;inccrs ' C Iuh. Vice Prcsidcnl 4 ; Amci Madi. tute of l-.lcctrical tinRinccrs 3, 4 ThiM -Thirmul Cmducliviiv ..( njuu Runs Huill of l-ihrc and I ' llc Duct MI s Rl( IIARO ILKINSON i , ,. - Xii.LiE Beth Wilkinson .... Lancaster ■■ clf NOR (Al l iattcvillc Normal I. 2 Thesis — Browning ' s ReliRious Philosophy I Websier Williams Milnaiikcc ■Jack MEDICINE Tau Kappa Epsilon: Cornell University 1. 2 ThcMs — The Effect of Exercise Upon the .Atcclalors of the Heart I. I SI I Y Williams engineering I Iorace Hays Williston •Biir LETTERS AND SCIENCE ( il-RTRLDE M. WlLLNL NNS ■r--ii..v LEITERS AND SCIENC:E Alpha Phi; Mil aukee-Downer Collenc I. ITiesis CiKirse— Schiller IIliiaheti I Nan(Y Wilson . home; EtONOMICS Ra Billings. Monl. M,lua,ikcc KLvkiik. Iciia Kiippa KapiMi Gamma, Roekford CollcKe 1; Euthenics t:iuh. Secretary 3 Lhesis Sh.K: Industry in linited Slates and EHect of War l- ' pon Such I.IDA L. Winkelhlecit imiaumacy State ( ' ...lie Aari nshurg. Pa. IhcMs - .ullr r.f Hcllad..nna ' lllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllillllHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIMIIMIIIIIIIItli I ' atf lOh mwr. iiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllU li. ARl- l rON f flU■lon LAW l.u ri.n :c CiillcRC 1. 2. StuJc-nt Court 1. 4 RwMoMiM iRKA MaJison ■Ray ENC-.INKERINC. Pi Tau SiKmu; American Stxiety of Mechanical I- ' nRinccrs Thesis — Test of the HeatinR anJ X ' entilatins S stem of the New Physics Building Ri x.tR G. WoLcorr Oshkos. Rog LF-TTF-RS AND SCIENCE Phi Gamma Delta: Sigmu Delta Chi; Dailv Cardinal I. 2. 3 Thesis — Labor in Wartime. Julius A Wolfram Fi Atkinson ■Judd At.RICULTURE Tau Kapcvi Epsilon Thesis — rhe InMuerKC of Added Sulphur m f- ermcntation of Rock Phosphate Manure Mixture. Porlland. Ore. Fr. nces Oxrolyn ck)d ■■Shrimr - LETTERS AND SCIENCE Pi Beta Phi; Colorado Woman ' s CoIIcrc I Thesis — -National Child Labor Committee and (ts Work. Dewitt Edward Yates Chipt cua Falls Pcle engineering Acacia: American Society of Mechanical Engineers; U. W, Engineers Club. Thesis — Test of a Unifkjw Engine. Edith Marie Zander Two Rivers ■Zandie ' Hockey 2: Choral L ' nion 1, 2; Pythia 2; S. G. A. I, 2; So- cialist Stltdy League; Suffrage League. Thesis — A Cradcvl Course in Music for a Public School. Milton C. Zellmer Oshkosh ■ZtiUe AGRICULTURE Tau Kapno Ep ilon; Alpha Zcta The i. — . Study of Moisture Ltjss in Corn Under DifTer- ent Ow Ttions of Curing Mabelle Gertrude Ziecler . Ai.lell, Idaho I MS AND science St M.. IhcM SlURIO C. JoHNBON ZoOK Stadison LETTERS AND S .II.N .I- niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Illllllllllllllll ' ntilllllllllllllUlllllllllllllllltllll!lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllt iIIII!j JOSEPH Garonur Bi:NNE rr .... Madison = Irianulc: f:orncll O.lkuc I. 2. 1. 4. li S ; BadRcr = H )arcr4. E-nviRtil ' S Naval Rcstrvi r ,rcc- — ■ I hcMs — Test nf a LnurMrn . ' ult matic Pump — • ■ ■ I I L TT P ri 111 Ni:i( KIR W ' llhiillc I m ' i;n(.inij:rin . I v • ' = f. iT .■, = - j lli-  Fr. nk .Xmiri-.w K.mser . Miluaukcc — _- P . ■ InanKit: MarMUtltc Inivcrsitv I, 2, 3; Civil linRinccr-. — U ' ♦•■l swiv :: ' t t Ihesis— Thi- llov. ( WalLT Over Broad-Crcsicd SuK = Bn i ' RANCisC. Lathrop Madison — i . Orchc-lra I. 2.rrcnchPlavv ! = ■■ , - ' ■ ' I hcsi .— What Did (.r DiJnt Lulhtr Sav at [he Did ui = ti _J •■- -NlARtiERi Pi:cK Milwaukee = LEVI II:RS and S(:ll N(.E■: = I aM Ti-nci- CrullcKc I . ( )l-crlin 2 = Hums riK- Poitrv .If iclor 1 lugo. = ' ■r Roy Pi;ti;rson mery y Pdi LliETIlR.S AND SCEENCE V t. hi Alpha Delia. Phi Wcta Kappa. Anus, 11 A LXunc = immtr Stviiin. I 117. IhcMs Hiinors = ncMs — The LcKul and LLcorutniic .Aspects of the ll untv — ' ' JEH| 1 Ie i.e:n Roiirs La ji ' OVmici XflBkflH l-KTTECRS AND SCIENCE E 1 •atO ' I hcsis -(loirite llernard hllaw and Ills Critics — j ' ' tV • •■- I :e E. ZiM Brinnen A mn.-a V ' i.?. A inn. — - ' ■ ] E-E- E IE H.S ANE1 S EE N :E = 1 . J l .lta l lla IVha 5 E niilMllUIMIIMMIinillllllllMllllllllllllllilllllUlllinuilltllllllllllllllllllllllllMMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllMllllllllllllllllllllllllH Pan tOS lltlllllllllllilMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIillllllllllilllllllllllllllllllKIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII ' . u I ' ) IHi I ' .) n I o 1- s Junior Class Officers ILLIAM BaLDERSION Lulu Estelle Saul Margaret Lathrci ' Secrelar -Trcasurer ntlliiiiiiilillliiMiiiiiiiiiiililiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiillllliliiilliliillillltlllllllllllllllilliiiiiii Pot€ 109 IIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIHMMI lUllllllllllII IIIIIIIIIIIMII! 5u |llllllllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIi(lllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllin .IIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIMIIIItlllUillll illl IMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIH niuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiniiiiiniiuiiHiiiiitiiiHiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiMiiR Pat, I II : iniiiiiiii: HiMlllllllllllllllllhlllllilllllliiiiiilllillllii: !llllltlllllllllllli: ill i llllllt||||llllllIinillllllllllllllllllllllllilllinillllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIItllllllllllllMIIIMIIIIIIIIIilllllllr Pate 111 Illllllllllllllli illlllllMniMMIIIIMIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIL: I ' -i vHi n) S o p ]} ( i| ) )n o 1 ' - c s Sophomore Class Officers Anthony George Zulfer. J r President Mildred Alleera Breyley Vice-President Gladys Hawthorne Secretary-Treasurer iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimMiiiiMiiiiiiiitiii 8 r.if 1 1 iiiiiiiiiiiiin ' III MiiiiiMiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilliiiiiiiiillllilii. I i I H I. ■ I i H iiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiii. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii : ' lllltllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllUIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIi Pat ' I If iiiiiiniiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiKiiiiiiiliiii iiillllllllllllllllllillil: W- x- was. as you knoir. the I ' rosh who won it, Though the Sophs maintain ' twas the cops as done it iiS wfk ' ilA ii ' ' .iitlillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMllllllllllllliiiii.iiiiillllllli iilllllllillillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltli: Jllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll illlltllllllllllllllll llMMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlll.llMllltllllllllllllllillllllllllll ' :i: it_ F „J= -. . . s%v ( r |1 :r ATI-- This is the Rush and the cofts uho uvn it. . ohod knoiis uho in aitch hei un it. nllllillllllllllillllii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiini liiiiiiMiiitniiiM ' 1 iiitiiiiiiiiliilllllllllilliilillllliiiiniiuiMiilliii: aiiliiilliiilllllllllllli : Freshmen Class Officers Elliott Walford Sparlinc, PresUlcrM Sada Elranor Blckmaster Vice-President Arc:hie SnyiciiFR Simonson . Secretarv-Treasurer Hi cj M MlJ( •ininnmiNiiiMiniiiiiiiiiimiiimiiiitiHiiiiiiiiimiiiiiMiiiiiiiMMiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiMiiii iiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiir: I ' iitc I in inJiiiiliiiiiiiiii I niiiiiiiliiilliiiiiiiiiiililiillliii.iunilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllliiilllii Board of Rcu:cnts Officers THi-onoKi; I. Hammond. ( llARLns H HAS 1 IrNRY JoiiSMiN, Stale TrcaNurcr IIaI-Siin.I. ImorkelLSon. M l£ M.Caiirky .... G. L. Gll-HHRI A. H 1-AHISKV President . . ice-President lix-oJTicio Treasurer Business Manager Secretary Bursar Purchasing Agent Charles R. ' an Hisi C.HARLF.S P. C ARY .... Gilbert E. Seaman, Stale at Large I ' crsonrii ' l President of the L ' nivcrsity. Ex-officio State Superintendent of Public Instruction, Ex-officio Milwaukee Mrs Florence G. Blcksi ALL, 6Va f a( -ar sc- Oshkosh A. J. HoRLicK. rif-s Dii riV . . Racine F. W. . . Not:, Second District Watertown Charles H. ilas. Third District Madison Theodore M. Ham.mond, K i(r( i i.vfric Wauwatosa James F. TRorrMAN, Fi i i Oi.vfrR- Milwaukee Miss Frances G. Pi rkins. .S ' i.v( i )i.s( -ic7 Fond du Lac D O. Mahoney. 6nrn i Oi.sffu . . . ' iroqua Granville D. Jones, Ziii ' i Zi Di,s ric-( W ' ausiiu Orlando E Cxarke, Xinth District . . . . • .Xppleton Ben F. Fa AST, Tenth District Eau Claire A. P. Nelson, EUnenth District Grantsburg IV.AHO.M Km, I MS IN SiNSl.i iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiMiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiii ' Patf no uiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.. The Board of ' isitors Ippoinri ' i .v u Hi ' iicrits Mrs. CliiARLES H. Carpi-ntkr, Madison W M Spooner, Milwaukee George P. Hambrecht. Madison John E McCainnell, La Crosse Ippo fifii )y the Miiriuii Mrs Lynn S. Pease. Wauwatosa Israel Shrimski, Chicaso Richard Lloyd Jones. Madison . pp iiiirc l by tlm Governor W .X Titles, Fond du Lac E. B. Belden. Racine Mrs. Charles M Morris. Milwaukee L I Stair, Brodhead Toe Board or Visiioiu -.llllllillllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIMIIMIIIIIilllllillllllllllllllllllllllimillllllilllll ' r iiiiilillllllllliliilllliiis::nuiilllllllllllllllllirillllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIJIU The Stud cut Senate fteadin£ l.c t to Right — SparhnR. Scolt. Joi Nidw s. Warrtn. Woodward, Seymour. Wild. i , Wh.tc. Urossard. Hcasslcr. Baker Pre Van Hisc. I i Officers Chari.F-S Richard ' an Nisi; XllRNK VlNCKNT ' aRN[;Y . SliARC tM PkAKIIOV WiLO Presidenl Ex-Officio President Pro Terti Secrelarv Mcttihcrs Loyal Soltiiwick Bakkr Elckni-; EinvAKD Brossard LkROY JaMI S Bl RIJN(.AMI SiF.I ' MI PaIRKK f-f X C JARKNfir. RiCYNOI.DS GroSSKR fiARi. Aim Ri I Ii;assi.i-.r I MI RY MdRRIS |i) I S I5iisAi.n William M .Cjinnis Artmir (jiari I s Nil lm m James Daiilf. Pi;ifr.son Harry llF.r.ci Scon WllllNFY NoRlll SfYMOI R LlLLIOII Walliord Si ' ARI IN(. fRNL I ( I-N ' I X ' arniy (]lfnn Bari Warri :n SliARC.FJS ' l PlAHOPY |LL Rom RI Bri ' F Whim KlN(. Gr||:R W(H D VARn iiuiiiiMIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIilllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIMIIIIIIIIillllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIItlllir: IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIII- Self (tovcrnrncnt Assochiiiou Anundscn ViHiams Incpid Nel-son Helen Gumming Helen B, Smith Irene Jones Elizareth Kendm 1 Kathryn Boll Cl m a Williams VIarjopy Hkndrm k Llcy Roc;ei s . Mavis Chudb . Katharine Washui ' Rlftm C Smith George Anlindsi n Lucy Wallricji jANfcT DlHKII June Gray Executive Council Pteifdent tct-President Secietary Treasurer Cer sor Chairman Y.W.C A. WA. V JournaltitiC , . . . . Dramatic Cine Musical Blue Dragon Yeltow Tassd Hed Caunttet Cteen liutlon Lciiisiarixe Board IKa ANDBtvl I.MMA Damk.ii nil K KaIIIL-RINL JoNls Kathi EEN Say V ' ekna Aoam . Martha Hnc.kl Theijua Josfji Anna Stoeelet LLatE Be c liMMA liNia.AND Leila Kilpatrick GREfA SCHLILTS tUivE BERnr Mabjohy Ktnybe DiiRnTHY Kyie Llcile Stanley MaHY HlJkCK 1 VmOTllY KVANS CeiiuaLins Flora Sii nECKEJt Clak BiAi. 1 .KACi; I ' O.I I.MIM. Mari.abli McMlans I ' lrn Searles LLEANim BnCAS Anne TULLERION Marie Mituiei l Ui la SaiuLTi Gi-Kini;iif Uu tii.i ' ji liATHER ClIUlRO JL.SMK MEf.EATH ( r.A Thompson KAniMIINIL DlflTNI.VS Mabel Cray BnSI Nl WMAN Verna Tucker ni-:iLN Bull Martha C;iiiiir -j Mari.iebitl Nl :i m Maiiel Thwaites BtiML Bliull I.El llENnRUkv Nl I.L PlJiCL Ine: iJn.KLN Ltr.iiiL Bii-ni-RUAN iRtNE HaII Y MaNMI: PaRJLEY lil NItIi Lj ' lllLRIE 1 lUUK..!. N.WA Ml.VKl l ;i AnY PaM ' WAI K (.1 ADYS W ISL Martha I li mii - ' I 1 1 AIDE I ' AINL IMA WlNCllEll T l.AVONI IIaNSK 1 MSI RifE IRANIES Wool. t: ,Ji VtRNAjoHN .-. Rossi iiji Mari.aret Warre MaJU.AK KT DltTMLI Julia JoHNMiN f ACS Salnders Rlth W ' etmore Blanoie I i AN KRANCtS JaUIT ' - 1 Starkwcathkr Maiielle ZiecLER riiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiMitiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiii ilNllllliilllllllll ' ' ! IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMMIIIIIIIIIIIIli lllllllli: ]] c)nicn Students ' Wdr Work (Council The Oman Power of this University is Back ol IX-mcxracy. I.ois Kimhall Malhcus. Dean oj Women. S. C. . . Palnoltc Rally. October IS. 1 I7. Oxjperation with ( ounty Council of Dcfens- I Liberty Loan. $12. ()()() Alice an Hise Regulation of Student .Activ iiies L Fcxxl pledge signed by 800 women. 2. Abolishment of all formal parties. 3. Cooperation in abolishment of Junior Prom I In EN D.AViS Red Ooss ... I . Surgical Dressings 2 Sewing 3. Knitting Helen Bull Iimergency War Work Helen B. Smith 1. Fatherless children of [-ranee. $730 2. For Y. M, C. A. Barracks a. 250 pennants b lt 0 posters c 75 Victrola records d I Victor talking machine e. 450 CoAi inu .i .i week f 5(K) copies ol . (nia i(ri ' l.ije with C hnstnuis greetings g KM) hospital l K.iks made by L ' nivcrsity women iililllllllllllllllllllltllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli I ' atr 124 Hi mm .f ritima fi!!!!!:!!!!l: ' l «li«il«« liaii;i;;Ji!ft •• ' ; ' li(..„i;v U u fa ,J-l;,. ' n.. ik; ' i ■ ir- ii;;: ri!. ;!i; ix i«ii ri ' fir i:: ii in; m i:: ii-ii Letters and Science in the Great War i BIGt l INti, hcalin;;. control, research, teaching, publicity — these are the main lines of war-activi- ties of the sixty to seventy members of the fac- ulty of Letters and Science who are now absent. Fighting on land — chiefly still In the future — is the part of about two-thirds of them Several arc in ambulance work; a few aid in control of food and minerals a gcxxi many arc working at research problems which start at aeronautics and go down the war-alphabet at least to .whs and tariff teaching gees from aviation to topography, and the subheads of publicity arc innumerable. The war-activities of the faculty at Madison, who num- K ' r about three times the absent, include all the heads except fighting, but the distribution of work is difTerent and the duties are part of the university service or addi- tional to it. Teaching and research are inevitably to the fore. The student knows most of the teaching, through general and special war courses, numbering fifteen for the second semester. In five departments. Research goes on actively in all departments which are allied with war ac- tivities, but it is not made conspicuous and its results arc for the Government alone. Publicity finds wide expres- sion in addresses (thirty-two members give hundreds of addresses during the yc-ar). by numerous bulletins and pamphlets issued through newspapers, by the university, the stale, and the nation. Besides these specific matters there are the countless activ Itics accessory to the war, like the Y. M. C. .X. and the Red Ooss. in which members of the faculty take their part with all other citizens. .Ml these things the faculty is doing and therewith tries ■ ' not to leave the (ither undone — the other being that most Important public service — the college education of the vouth of Wisconsin S- i iilllllllllllUII lllllllllllllllllll illllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIU ritllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllltllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll: IIMIIIilllllllMniMIIID ' HIMMIIIIII! iHIIMMIIIIIIIMIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIillllllllidl lllllllllllllllllllllll|IIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIItlllltr I ' atc I in £l||||llllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll|llll||IIII|||i; IIMMIIIIIIIIIKMIIIinilllllMIUnnilL ' ■■ ' ' ' ■■■ ' ■■■■ ' ' ■ ' ■ ' ' i i ii ii iiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiil .iiihiiitiiiMiiiiiiiiiiini:!Mi]:i niiiiii. MinuMinililllllllMtiiiiiiiilllllllllllllitiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiilllii iiiiiilllllllllllliliii: illlMllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllC :iilllllllllllllllllllllllMllllltltllllllllllllllll|||||||il||||||li||||||||||||||||||||||||||lilllllllllllllllllllllltllllllllllilllllllillllllllllin A War-Time Course in Commerce ' I IL present ar has crealtd a great de- mand for e ery form of training supplied by the Course in Commerce. Ne cr be- fore in the history of the country was there so great a need as now for accountants, fin- anciers, business executi es, specialists in ad- ertising, and men with a knowledge of the eco- nomic resources and lousiness practice and lan- guages of the world. These needs are felt as never before both by the go crnment and by pri ate concerns. In order to meet them se - cral courses ha e been readjusted, notably the one in Factory and Office Administration so as to expand the part dealing with the adminis- tration of stores, and the senior thesis seminars so as to deal w ith war problems. I he number ol men trained in this course w ho are now in arious branches of the military ser ice cannot be -stated with accuracy but it is a large percentage of the eligibles. It includes four members of last year s instructional staff, from a third to a half of our alumni, and alx ut three-fourths of last year ' s senior class. a. 1 i W illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll lllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMMIIIIIIIIIIt I Hj IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIItltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllln IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIMMMIIIII llllllllllllllllllllllll ' liiilliiitlllllllllllllllllllllllMllllllllllllllllKMlillllMIIIIIMIMIIMItl ' Pofc I )4 jl,lllll„i,, IMillililllllUIMI ' I ' ll ' ' ! 1 ' ,1 If piillili ' ii ' HIlll ,i..-.a ' ' ' Ilk- ' ' ■{■■ ' ■ ' ■■■■ ' -Ciii|| ! ' ' ;! =- ' f?!|ir- ,ni. ic:;. ii:i ' . II «i:: n i- n ' ' • ' ' o«; Activities oi the Ci)lle ' e of A ri- culturc in tne War ) I III declaration ol war lound the students and fac- ulty ol the College of Agriculture ready to scr c Kith in the army and in f xxl prexiuction. It was e ident that t he most immediate service at that lime could be given in f(K d prcxiuction, and when the students returned from the Easter recess they found pro- isions already made for their release for service in f(xxi production enterprises. Two hundred twenty-five stu- dents in the (College were accepted for such scr ice. Not only was there urgent demand for farm labor, but calls came from all parts of the state for advice regarding production problems in order that maximum results might be obtained Ihe faculty of the (College at once turned its attention to helping soke these problems and in stimu- lating greater prcxjuction Ten members of the stalT served as emergency f(X)d agents in arious counties of the state: others prepared bulletins and circulars on va- rious phases of food production, while a number directed their activities toward the in estigation of sF)ccial prob- lems incident to the war Ihe mobilization of the National Guard took a con- siderable number of Agricultural students from their work and each successive call for volunteers for the Ofifi- cers ' Training Camps has added to the number In addi- tion to these, many have enlisted in various lines of mili- tary work. While it is impossible to determine definitely how many students enrolled in the College at the declara- tion of war have since entered the army or navy, appro.xi- matcly two hundred are now known to be in the service Sixteen members of the instructional staff have enlisted and ha e been called to various forms of war work, and four others are serving in positions resulting from war activities, althou.gh they are not regularly enlisted. Ulllllllllllllllillllllllllll .IllllllllllUlllllllllllllllllllllilllll! illlllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIMIH IHIIIIIIIMIIIIIIMIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMII.- Patt I tr MlllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHllinil: lllllllllllllli: ' •iMMIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIti: illllllMIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIItllllllllllllllllllllllllllll I ' act I V (Sill jll ' ' ' m ,:.N ' i « ' ■r- ' n ' r iC ' ::;j 5 ipy! .=1 iiijiiiiiiili|i-yi.:...i!fe ••. .. ' ' i!;s; «« ' .,|j ' . jT ' .: ■ ' • ' !it;:jii;- - -. ' ii ;• : ' ' ' iiiiiiJHnnrnniiii; ' ' ■ ' =;;:v::.-:: ' ' ! ' ;=m:„. . r. • «  •.„... K. ' u,::::: -:- ' M i.;;-- ■ ii;.:;;;;-; ..:;:.;;:;:;:!-:. ' : ' ..! ii;:: 11,1 .It;;, n I ' l.i iiiii iiiii li:i:. ii I ' hl ' i:i. i rln! ' |iiiiii!tiiiii!iij!.,-iii The Engineer s Part in the War lli relation of the College of Lingineering to war actiMties is. to a considerable ex- tent, special and peculiar. The successful prosecution of the war and the maintenance of industries essential thereto demand the ser ices of a great number of men of the highest technical training and ability: and such men will be needed not only throughout the war but for reconstruc- tion afterwards. The engineering student is thus confronted with an apparent conflict of duties. Shall he enlist at once in active service or continue his training at school. ' The patriotic impulse is to go — the patriotic duty may be to remain at work. Realizing the situation, the War Depart- ment has emphasized the importance of thor- ough training by permitting the enlistment of a considerable proportion of engineering students in the Engineer Reserve Corps for the particular purpose of placing them in Class 5. so that they may complete their education. There is no danger that the college man will not be ready to go when needed. The danger is rather that he may go too soon. To sta ' will be harder than to go; but in any ' case, no slackers should be allowed. As General Black, Chief of Engineers, has said: We can all of us serve by doing to our level best the duty that lies immedi- ately before us and be prepared for further calls when thev shall come. 7. X jJlllllllllllimillllllllllilllllllll Ill Illllllllll IIIIMIIIIIIMIMMIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIillilMMIIIIIIIIIIIimilllllli. nlllllllfllllllllilli MilllHillllllllllllllllllllllllMlllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMIIIIIII I ' ai, 141 llMllllllllllllllilllllllllinillllllllllllilllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIMIII ' Illllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll Pan l ' !l li  : ; i ' l ' r ' .. !;i; ' -: -lin|i;f.ii '  i,,|iM.L illi ' .l. ■Itniii ' !! ..J I . ' I •! ' Ill am III- iiiiMiiiiii ' f, r ' li ' inifii ' i lllhi • Mill im n ii i r ' llr ' :| l,| . ' T i iiiiiii- mi iiniiii ' ' ' ■.. ' , ' •■ ' (,.:„■ .-■■■■•;i«i:!: ' ' ,., i„,i ' . •• ' ■ ' ; aik •Iw ' li Tilt; University of isconsin Law Scni)i)l C kJHK vc.irhMS m rk- ilu- 0[h jnni tr ar i.fllit founding of the IC ' ' ' l Vhilc the stress i.f «ar makes it inexisedient to 1 7 i ...unmeniorateadequatelv thissiRnificani milestone in its history. -- It IS tittinR that the graduates and friends of the schixil recall its tiuml lf IseRinninR, its steadv progress m standards, scholarship, and e iutpment We arc proud of the long line of graduates and former stud- ents, uholia eKjrnea worthy part in the upbuildingof the communities in which thev have livc-d. and of the very large numlser who have played distinguished parts in the judicial and political history not only of our own slate, hut of the middle and far west 1 1 is well to recall that up to l HII. when the period of rapid growth began at the university, a majority of the graduates of the uniycrsit held law degrees I he great industrial development of the last decade has been reflected in the rapid growth of the scientific and economic courses of the univer- sii ' , until now the students preparing for the industrial pursuits greatly outnumber those in law It must not be assumed that law schixils arc on the decline In truth, the past fifteen years ha e witnessed tremendous strides in legal education, not only in scope and methods of instruction, hut in esiuipmcnt as well The law schools are on the threshold of a great and useful future, for whatever the outcome of the present war, we can be sure of this, that it will result in profound changes of an eco- nomic and six.ial character, which will mean corresptmding radical changes in our legal institutions through which s xial and economic changes must be expressed If we arc to progress, we must have as leaders men trained not only in the social sciences, but in law as well It IS this need for trained men. who can think straight and see far. who make knowledge a stepping stone and not a net. that gives the opptir- tunity to the sch(x ls of law Legal training does not fit men for war; indeesl. the lawyer ' s vork IS the vcrv antithesis of the soldiers Justice through law is the maxim of the lawyer, and the goal toward which ciyili:ation has been strug- gling since Its dawn Neither can the law schools forge their instru- ments of peace into the weapons of war, hut lawyers can and will serve on the field of war Thousands of young men from the law schools, or men just starting on their professional career, have entered their country ' s ser ice, and the class rixim of every law schtxil in the Nation IS depicted These men are offering their lives that the Anglo- Saxon ideals of government and law may live, and the doctrine of brute force may perish May thev be spared the supreme sacrifice May thev return to greet the seas in when men shalljlve by reason, conscious that they fought not to consiucr, but to enthrone justice ■Slav they take up their civil life again in the Klief that what is worth dying for is worth living and sacrificing for. May the courage of the field give place to the courage of the forum. May they realirc that the courage and self sacrifice that shields the innocent or struggles tor the right at the price of calumny, is as noble as any feat of arms, splendid though It in.i be  ■! m ■(• ' ■ • f. ::;lii: ' iHi ' ! f ' l H.., |lll|M . I .1 ;.;i iiii. ' ' M i ' !n ' ' « i. ivi o n c: II nm ii-i The Medical bcnool and the War BWLLTY. When ihc L lulcd Suites cnlcrcd the Mir the members of the fiiculty of the mcdicul chixjl offered their scr ices and sent a statement to ashinston of the special work in which each uav trained In reply the request was made that enoujjh men should remain to keep the school in efficient opera- tion, the rest spared for novcrnment service. Four mem- bers of the faculty are now in the army medical service, one in public health service, and one is a captain in the infantry service Two men whom we expected to add to the faculty this year are likewise in service. To offset the loss in instructional force we ha c an unusual number of student assistants this year. I he members of the faculty who remained in Madison have undertaken special duties in addition to those of leaching Members of the clinical staff have devoted a larye amount of time to medical examinations of recruits The district advisory medical board is kicated at the Cllinic. A member of the medical faculty is in the State Council of Defense and others are members of various state and national committees. In the laboratories scientific research has been directed toward war prob- lems, especial attention being devoted to the lungs, to poisonous gases, and to gas masks to enable aviators to (ly where the air is thin. Students. Most of the medical students have enlisted in the Medical Reserve Corps of the army or navy sub- ject to nrulitary duty. It is the intention of the govern- ment to fcep these students in sch(x l so long as they maintain gocid standing, because the need of keeping up a supply of well tfai ' ntjd medical men is recognized. I en or fifteen per cent of the students have, however, gone into active military service and arc in various lines of military work from heavy artillery to aviation. I ' lttiirc. The war is likely to produce many cripples for whom special treatment will be needed. It is quite pos- sible that the medical sch x)l may play an active part in this work. Possibly this will be the (irst use to which the Bradley Memorial Research Hospital scxin to be erected may be put Illlllllllllllllllllllll! iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitininiiiiiiiiiiiiiiML The Xcw Pre-Mcdiccil liuihliii :s of The University of Wisconsin Bv Arthl R Peabooy. State Architect ' I IROl (JH the courtesy ol Mr and Mrs Charles R Crane and Mr and Mrs H ( :. Bradley, who have given the money to huild the Mary C ornelia Bradley memorial research hospital. and by an appropriation of the legislature lor the new student infirmary, the first build- ings of the permanent pre-medical group in the Court of .Applied Sciences of the L niversity have been made possible. ' I ie buildings were designed by .Arthur Peabody. State Architect, and will be constVucted this year. The group will be located south of the home economics and unl crsity extension building and will consist of a central clinic building, the memorial hospital and one other hospital building, of which the first two will be ready lor occupancy within a year The buildings will be of firc- pnxjf construction and will be furnished with e crv modern equipment for the study and treat- ment of disease. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiimniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiititititiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiR Pair 147 ■Jilt ' iiiiiiniiiiiiii iutMf Mtiriiii iiiMiiiMiiiniimnMi iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii)iiii)tMii :illlllllliiaiiM.lllllllllC Physical Education T E Jones. Chairman of Detyarimcnt Coach of Track Guy S, Lowman. Director oj Gymnasium Coach of Basketball and Baseball Dr J C Elsom. McJicat Examinalton wn Corrccinc Gymnaslics John R Richards Coach of Football Harry E Vail Coach of Rowing Joseph C Sti-.inai ' I-.r Coach of Gymnastics Harry H Hini  an Coach of SwimminB FREpCARtiiR Coach of l xinR GeoR(-.e Benish Coach of C ' ross Country Edward S Sf;HRANK 0 ach of Wrest linn Frank NicKEi s )N AsMstnnt lo Chairman : U: department by the selection of Mr Lo mIIn and Mr Richards has this year nJdcd two of the IcadinR I G .iihlciic men (if the cviunirv to its Mnff B )lh have hud u broad and practical experience as physical cducamrs We iirc n  i yet a nation of athletes by any means War has brouKht out the defects of the preparedness of our man power ( ur national physuiuc is weaker than it was fifty years aR«) This is emphasized by the fact thnt thirty per cent of our men are unfit for military service The fundamental law that function makes structure is applicable here It IS an csta lishcd fact that health and vi or ol the individual larRely dciermtnes his capacitv for service to the Mate and t MXiety With this in mmd, the Department of Physical EducatKin aims t« pmvide opportunity for all Mudcnt.i to cnKaKe in athletic sports under the direction of competent teachers lo the end that a high dcRree t f pliyscial cfTKicney may be nttamcd by the entire student lx dy, I he Department aims lo promote athlciics m their broadest sense. n  i only for their physical effect, but for their effect on the moral fitxr of the individual li is u fine thtnK l develop the body, it is even a finer thinR to develop the mind; Isut the urcatesi alue comes fnmi the fact that athletics develop character, the oualtty worth while Icam experience f ir every man in schtx ! — the dcvelopnieni and practice of the ru ucd virtues o( couraite. deierminatton, cooperation aiul self-control, assets lo the individual and to the ruitH n Jhese arc ihc MUiilities thai make athletic i v invaluable and for the development of these qualities athletics h ild un imp trtant place in hrKhcr education. • MiiilMOIinilllHIIIUnilllMMIIIIIIimillllMIIIIMIIIIUtllillllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIMMIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIMIimUIIMlin Pair 4K il||||IMHIIMUH 4 UIHI ltllMllllllliUIIHUtHil(. illlllinillllllli ttlllllMlillMUMIIIIIIIMIHUnilllllllli:: University of Wisconsin School of Music ( M Rii.s 1 I Mills lu l , Director .md f- ' r(itc ' -i r cil Mu ic Fletcher A. Parker. Emeritus Professor of Music PfcTER V. Dykema. M.L., Professor of Music, Chairman, Department of Public School Music Lowell L. Townsend, .VI. A., .Assistant Pro- fessor of Music X ' aloemar von Celtch, Mus.B., Assistant Professor of Music Mi JNiE L. Bergman, instructor in Voice Culture Doris B. Carti:r. B.M . Instructor in Piano forte Ernest B Chamberlain, M . , Instructor in Voice Culture and Theory . lice Crane. B .- ., Instructor in Public School Music Irene B. Eastman. Mu B , Instructor in Organ and Theory Iltis, Leon L., Mus.G . Instructor in Music Jesse Saugstad. Instructor in Band Playing and Orchestral Instruments (Wood Wind), Conductor of Regimental Band ' T } in two © Ha outstanding items of impxirtancc concerning the School of .Mu-ic m b l were hangcs in the four year course of music, and in the building. result of the former, the first degree of Bachelor of Music was given ti i ,,xr Only part of the scheme of alteration was carried out in the building. This was due to the war. OS the legislature would undoubtedly have approved the completion of the proposed plan. The studio portion was finished, leaving the alteration of the auditorium lor the future : IIIIIIIIIIIINIilitll(MIIUIIIIMIMIHIIINHMIHIIIHIIIIIillllin ilHMHIHIIIIHIMIiMMIHUIIIinilllllHillMIIlT :iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiinMiii:niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii University Extension War Service V INCE American entry intu the (ire. it Vorld ;ir the I ni er-.it F.xtension Di ision ha k rendered a great variety of services — this in spite of the fact that one-third of the admin- J istrativc and instructional force has been Riven up through leave or resignation within this period on account of the war emergency, and that in some. of the district branch offices the entire personnel has changed. ery early in this period several large traming classes in home nursing and social ser ice were conducted in Milwaukee. In the latter half of l ' -117-l.H, Home Service Institutes designed to train volunteers in each community to organi:e and administer lcx:al reliel and give free aid and counsel to the dependents of soldiers ' families were undertaken for twenty-si.v towns of Wisconsin It organized the junior labor and boy power of the state, it developed a plan for utilizing garb- age waste for pork and fat production and issued a bulletin thereon; it developed lectures and popular leaflets for fuel ecjnservation as related both to industrial and domestic use: it circulated (xitrioiic slide and film service throughout the state; it circulated innumerable well-selected package libraries on war subjects and encouraged study and forum instruction through the en- couragement of competitive triangular discussion league- ; it adjusted its platform inspiration and instruction work in commencement speaking, chautauqua program-., lecture and lyccum courses to the ends of patriotic education, and conducted for the Slate Council of IX-fensc a Slate Patriotic Speakers ' Bureau, it gave consecutive, systematic instruction in French and many other subjects by class and by mail to enlisted men. and called a state business men ' s congress for the discussion of industrial and commercial questions made acute by the war emergency It has put its resources in texts and materials at the disposal of ihe government for great federal problems like the re-education of maimed men, and its institutional organization at the service of the nation ' s call iiiillllillllillliilillllllllllllllilllllllitiiiiiiiittllli: tillllllltllllii IIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIMIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII): a ■h r - ■ The Library School of The University of Wisconsin . l. rrni w Simpson L)lix.i;(in, I A.. l.L.B . Direct ' i Mary Emogene Hazeltine. B.S., Preceptor Helen Tl ' RVILL. B.A., Instructor in Cataloging. Classification and Library Economy Elva Lucile Bascom. B.A., B.L.S.. Instructor in B K)k Selection and Evaluation Clarence Brown Lester, M.A., Instructor in Legislative Reference and Public [ x:uments Jessie Welles. Instructor in Loan Administration and Library Economy Julia Wright Merrill. B.L.S.. Instructor in Trade Bibliography and Library Economy Mary Allegra Smith, B L.. Instructor in Library .Administration Catherine Head Coleman. B.A., Instructor in C ' hildrcn ' s Work r II : V,AR AND LIBR-AR ' WORK Jl III war has brought recognition of the importance and value of libraries, librarians being .invmg the first summoned for national service, to organize and administer camp libraries, [ivscmble books for soldiers everywhere, and to push patriotic education through the regular work in local libraries. The call for trairKd librarians far exceeds the supply. Eduoition for librarianship affords a special knowledge of classification, indexing, cataloging, filing, and the care of records that is in great demand by the national government Nine graduates of the Wisconsin Library School arc already in federal positiorvs, and more arc wanted The call from libraries all over the country for workers trained in Wisconsin give-- a wide range of choice in accepting a position, both for lnc.Tti in iiru-l pKi -!- ot u«irL :iillllliiiiiiiiiiiiiiuilituiuiittliiiiuiliiuilltilllllliilliiiiiiiilllilllllilllllliiiiiiiiiliii Patt If I J ZlllllllllllllllllltllllH«l(4U)J HE SI IRIT OF THE UNIVERSITY is the title gixen this painting by its artist. It em- bodies the purpose of all student activities — the present aim of the Uni ersitv. In the fall of 1916. before the United States entered the war, Wisconsin students contributed toward a Wis- consin ambulance in France. This was merely one example of that spirit which desires to give comfort to the helpless, to ease suffering, and what is most important of all,toaid the cause for which our Allies are fighting. The one purpose of the Unixersity, its life, its actixities, is to further the all im[X)rtant issue — To Make the World Safe for Democracy. THE UNIVERSITY ALhleLics CoUci e Athletics Duriny War Time ■•I --i Mh.il llu- .iliiiu l,i;iMlc-ml li.lic Junr • It ihc hcKinninii nl ' ih rc l i.«ikh;iMy acu. r l shdw Its palriousm vhcn PrcMdcm Wilson . ■ ..f alhklics. the laculli li- ..( a cclk-KC sIk.uIJ kc- l.nvard mure i war titJli seemed to he an open i,|ueslnt L ' war.anJ nianv collewes in their pat rum eaneellinK schedules Wisconsin. anMni. cancelled us hasehall and irack schedule xprcssed himself in such positive terms i : of the various coIIcrcs ri rRanired the vie s , and we now have delinilelv determined that athletics shall Ko on dunnK the w-ar. ollhouuh we must laKir under adverse conditions which lahle The spirit thai makes a man an athlete makes him respond to the first call of his country for the Knm task of war No department of the I ' ni- versitv has felt the war so keenly as has the Athletic Deparlmenl. l-ut to us also comes perhaps the Rreatcst Klors from the number of our athletes who are now in the thick of the flRht Wisconsin may feel lustly proud of her athletes who are wcarinR the khaki with the same spirit that thev once wore the cardinal jersey, and who arc usinR the trained muscles and alert hrains that once hrouuht RJory to their Alma Mater, for the honor and Riory of their country Sixly-six men from our four maior sports are now enlisti-d in the liRlitinR forces of the L niled Slates The University has Riven freely of its Ixsi men and the Varsity teams have hccn Iniilt from new material, practically all the eypericnced men 1-einR in the service ll remains for those who are left to lake upon themselves the task of carryinR on the athletic proRram and upholdinR tlic reputation of the school ll is important that every man Rive his hc-M lo his sclwxil and in this way prepare himself for the hardships of military life No man has a riRht to K ' a novice in athletics or untiualificd for military service I his war IS RoinR lo hoom athletics. Kith intercollcRiatc and intra- mural When It IS over I think we shall see compuls. ry athletics in our CoIIcrcs, There is more Rcneral participation tn athletics in our country today than ever Iscfore We should kec|i up our collcRe alhlelic activities. lookinR to the future. developinR men with nerve, determination and self reliance for niitional defense, and when the war IS o cr we will not have to hcRin at the Ix-RinninR. hut will have a vilid struclure U| in which to build C .iiHiiuiiiiiHiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiHiiiiiKiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiini ' . The thlctic Jhninl Otficers Eber Edward Simpson William Stephen Chandler James Dahlf. Peterson ■• V •■ Men Howard Joseph Hancock William Stephen Chandler Eber Edward Simpson James Dahle Peterson Demmer Golden Paul Passmore Rudy . Donald William McGinnis roothall . Basketball Baseball . Track Cross Country Swimming Gymnastics . President Vice-President . Secretary A on W men Frank Victor Birch Newell Stephen Boardman Frank Rowan O ' Donnf.ll 7 u ' Athletic Council James Frances Pyrt Thomas Edward Jones Scott Holland Goodnight Charles Henry Bunting Halsten Joseph Thorkelson Chairman Secretary Murray Charles Beebe William Duncan RinuRrsoN Eber Edward Simpson nilllllllllllllllllllUlllllillllllMMIIIilltlUiniMIIIMIMIIIIiniMltMUIIIMIMHMIIinnitlllllMIMMIIIIMIUMIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIir - ' ii iKlllliiiiiiiiiiMiiiiuiriiiiiiiiiiiiiilllililllliriiiMiiiiiiiiiiMitiliiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiii iiimmiiiiiiiiiiiiil: earers oi J.eW7 I UtfWRT IlDWARO lioNlJI Charlies Hasd Carpkntkr Ai.Li N C.IAH. DAVi:y Sll-Vl SSlioiLO f UnwARn AsDRi w Hammen; Hn losi I Ha Carl Phii.ip Baiij I Iarold WiLi-iAM Brock Wii i.iAM Sti-chi N- Chand Andrew Ir ist. AsDRt Ck Rtx N W ' li I lAM Crvs HEMtV CHARLtS DeNM HARtn n Bryant Glstav Ri-:inii Hf-RHi RT Urtis Kickhki Arthlr Jami-s Krai-ovix William (HTodusoN Ralph lrnon Scoir liaskethatt Harolo Michael Knapp LoRtNz Jacob Maisel Kher El Basehall ard Simi son Bernardo Whiti-ield Elsom Demmer Golden Harry Richard Heintien CrosS ' Country W ' lLi RD 1-OL ' is Dayton Bernardo Whitfield Ulsom Armin David Saiui fc.BER Edward Simpson Ben Edwin Sivyer Harold Bailey Stark Urold Francis Vauchn Irank Lawrence Wiuston E er Edward Simpson Edwin Alfred Swinsen Anthony Geor .e Zl ' leei Clyde Lester Nash I AMES Dahle Peterson Edward Barnes Williams [Dimmer Golde. ' Henry Lolms Biersach Stephen Patrick F-ox ; Glenn Haldeman KiNC GkIER WoODWARr THE ' aWa MB Loiis R Mann. Eoothall l- RANK R. O ' Donnell. Cross-Counir Bernard E Meyers, Cross-Ct untrv Ronald W Ramsicy. Cross-Cx untrv Andrew J Brann. Crov. -O untr Martin A Eladoe-s. Basketball I Jarlow H Pease. Basketball (rank V Birch. Basketball S Llewexlyn Si ' ENt.LER. Basketball Otto P Diederich. Gvmnastics iiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiillimiiliiiililllllllltllliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin Pott I «ft )iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniL V. James Carey Babcoiik Kenneth Edward Bahe De. ne Smith Bascom Frank Victor Birch William Stephen Chandler De, ne Griswold Davis John Ferdinand Gates Demmer Golden borce c. gunderson Lyd Paul Guttmann Howard Joseph Hancock Edwin Andrew Hammen Arthir James Kralovec William Michael Kelley Carl Wildemar Maedje Bernard Parker Mullen Arthur Charles Nielson James Dahle Peterson Clarence Albert Pottincer Irving Puchner E. Edward Saberhacen Armand Robert Schiller William Schwartz Roger Clifton Shiels Eber Edward Simpson Leslie Walter Van Natta niiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiii liiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiilllilillllllilillllllilMiiiiiiiiillliiii Pagt IS7 IIIIIIIMIIIIIIIMIIIIIItlllllMllllllllllllllllli. UKIillllllllMli • lltlMIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIimilllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIMIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIHI IIH Pair ISi ..9 :iiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiHinHiiniMiimimiiiiiii Mi iMiiMiiMiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiutiri  i ' kn iiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiutiii!iiiiiii . nillllllllllllllllllir ' iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiD ' MitiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiitMiiiiiitiiiiiiiiir Pat, I f9 !lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli ... iq| ; iM «i iji«llf| ai Wisconsin ' s New Stadium IXilicalcJ Xaivmher i. h i: ■M.ONSINS new $40,000 athletic stadium at Camp Randall was auspiciously dedicated n November 3. ' 7 . before a crowd of 10.000 alumni, students and townspeople, who xicked the concrete structure to view the titanic football struRsle with Minnesota, k was Homecoming day. University and state officials solemnly dedicated the field between halves of the game and the two teams gave the new gridiron its baptism of battle ; the Wisconsin eleven fittingly commemorating the occasion with a magnificent victory over the Northmen. The new stadium lilh a long-felt need at Wisconsin, and will, when completed, stand as a great monument to the leading university of the west. It comprises one of the finest football fields in the west, and a quarter-mile cinder running track, embodying the most modern construction, will be completed Mwn. The gridiron has a special double-drainage system which insures a dry field even after a series of heavy rains or much snow. The preparation of the field alone cost $8. 5(H). Until the demand for scats increases, the concrete stand on the west embankment will bear the burden of the attendance When completed, it will seat lO.(XM) people .At the games last fall, when this section was not quite completed, further seating space was made available by the use of the old covered grandstand and a section of wooden bleachers mo ed from the old field to the new. ITicse two sections furnished 5.0(K) additional seats In time to come, larger crowds arc expected to require further concrete stands, and future generations of students will undoubt- edly witness the playing field entirely enclosed by a mammoth concrete bowl. The stadium is being built on mi ney appropriated for that purpose by state legislatures and by alumni contributions l ie legislature of l ' )15 set aside $20, (HK). alumni contributions added $2.1fX). and the ' 7 legislature appropriated $10.(KM). uiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii uiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir; FOOTBALL ' uiiiitiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiii)iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiui Miii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiriiriiiiiiiiiiii)j: BMlTEAM Coiifeictin ' Snitulirijis W . L Ohio State 4 Minnesota 3 1 Wisconsin 3 2 Northwestern 3 2 Illinois 2 2 ( hicafjo 2 2 Indiana 1 2 Michigan , . , 1 1. 000 .(yb7 (1 eOO t 0 1 .500 1 .500 333 000 M (HIM Office Howard J osiii ' H I 1an :o ;k Armin; D StHL ' LT: Mariin ' J SnERroAN John G Bi-ount Fred M. Bickel John Richards • . Thomas E. Jones Person Howard Joseph Hancoc.k, W — Right Tackle Eber Edward Simpson, W — Quarter Back VVii.i.iAM Michael Kellev. W— Right End Arthur J Kralovec, W — Left Guard Herberi M. Kieckhefer, W— Right Guard Hohart E Bondi. W— Left Half Back Charles H. Carpenter, W — Center GusTAV R. jAf.oBi, V — Full Back Ralph V Scorr. W— Left Tackle Captain Manager Assistant Manager Assistant Manager Assistant Manager Coach Assistant Coach Wisconsin Wisconsin Wisconsin Wisconsin Wisconsin Wisconsin Wisconsin Wisconsin Results of U (I 20 10 3 uel ■ rank L. WpsTON. W — Left End .• LLAN C. Davey. W— Left Half Back Harold F. V ' auchn, W — Right Half Fiack Benjamin E. Sivyer. W — Right End William O. Olson, W — Right Guard Stevens Goiild. W— Right Half Bock Orton Keyes. W — Left End Edwin A. Hammen, W — Left Tackle I Iarold Siark. W— Right Half Back Season IVloit Notre Dame Illinois 7 lowu Minnesota 7 Ohio State lb Chicago Tolul Pi .112 tnts Opfwncrxs .iilllllMtMIIIHIMIIIIIiriMllllllllllilllllllllMMIIIIIIttlllltll IIMMIIMMMIIIiMM MIIIUIIHMIIIIIIIIIIItlllllll tMIM  ) tMIIMIIItir  .!« If ' 2 uiiiitiiiiinillllllirir iiiiiiiiiiiMiniiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiMitntiiiiiiiiii ' The 79 7 Wirsiiv lOothall Team t % 9 % g, 9 t f t ' f t f ♦ --t Jacubi KtdJv vt.c Uiiii K)t«.klii.i«.r b«.o(i i lammcn GuulJ Kcycs Gardner Mueller Weston Olson Peterson Gallun Jones Carpemcr Sivycr Simpson Hancock Kelley B jndi Richards Davey Stark VauRnn Uiff Jo in HicharO iMMriMiiMiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiniiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiniiiiniiiMmii II Patt ie S f-f ' lIUIIIlltUillillltl.M.I iMitiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiHitmr:: Hancock (Capl ) The 1917 Team By CIaptain I Ioward 1 1an(;(x:k Wisconsin started its 1917 football season under the most difficult circumstances in its his- tory. War conditions caused the I ' Jss of many VV and prospective ' men. and enlistments during the season itself lent an air of uncertainly to the situation Due to those conditions work was slow yettinfj under way and, after several men new to varsity f(X)tball had reported and the eligibility handicap had been lifted. Coach Richards had a squad of only 23 men from which to construct a team. The team, after several weeks of practice, showed latent strength in its preliminary games, but emerged from the scoreless tie game with Notre Dame in a crippled condition and unable to put up its best fight against Illinois the following Saturday. The Wisconsin schedule was the hardest any team ever faced, not so much because of the strength of the opp ising teams, but because the hard games followed one another so closely that the team was continually crippled and unable to prepare for important contests as fully as otherwise might have been done The lllmois game found Wisconsin in poor shape from the gruelling Notre Dame game the Saturday pre ious The team recuperated from the Illinois contest, meeting the weak Iowa eleven the follow- ing Saturday, and then beat Minnesota decisively a week later. The latter game, however, crippled the squad again and when Ohio State came the next Saturday, the team did not possess its full strength ' ith an open week, however, before the C hicago game, the hospital squad diminished and the Mar(xjns pro ed easy victims in the last game of the season, Tcx) much credit cannot be given C oaches Richards. Jones, and Lowmun for their efficient work in developing the team With these men retained as a permanent coaching staff Wiscon- sin will be assured of a successful fcxHball record for years to come. liiniilllllillllllMUIIIIIIIilllllllllllllMllllllltlllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllinilMIIIII iillllllilllllillllllllliilllllllilllilllliiilin iiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiM.iiitiiniiniiiiiiiiiniimiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiii:: CARPtNrtR (Cuptain-tilect) A Look Ahead By Capt.mn-Elect Ceharles Carpenter Due to the cvcr-prcscnt shadow of ineligibility and the present uncertainly ol men returning because of the war, it is almost an impossibility to make predictions as to the strength of the Wis- consin football eleven for next fall. At present the prospects of the 1918 squad seem fairly bright Of the nineteen men to whom Ws were awarded at the close of the season past, only six men graduate in June. Of the thirteen remaining, however, live enlisted immediately after the close of the gridiron season. Should the remaining eight W men return, excluding the possibility of the five already in scr ice coming back, the N18 team will have a good backbone on which to build. There is. of course, a possibility that some of those eight may also enlist before the first call is issued next fall. .And then there is always the chance that this number may be reduced by eligibility rules. The freshman squad of ' i 7 comprised a number of players who arc certain to make strong bids for Varsity positions in I ' JIS. These, with the return to eligible rating of several men who last fall could not play on the team, should be a big help. The reappointment of Coach Richards and the knowledge that his assistants of last fall will be back to aid in the construction of the I ' IH eleven assures Wisconsin, in the coming season, of as successful a team as the material warrants With the coaches working with the players in the same harmony as in 1917, next season should see a continuance of the successful record started last fall. A . .Am mk iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii luiiiiiiiiiiiuuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin ininiMIMIIIIIUIItlllllllllllllllMIIIMIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIi lllllllillillllli:: The 1917 Season B-, Bin V Rk ii AS ihc 1917 l(X)tball sc;ison a success? This question, which, in ihis case, is assumed as an excuse for what is to follow, is almost eligible for the foolish catalogue. The IQ17 season was a success — a huge success; and the truth of this statement will be demonstrated more and more as time bcx:s on. for It has laid the foundation for a fcxitball policy at Wisconsin — a Badger system, if you wish to call it that. The results of 1917 ire responsible for .a complete change in f(X)tball conditions here, and lierc of all places a change was needed and needed badly. lo bring out my meaning let me go back over the season a little and also explain conditions that preceded the coming of John R Richards, ' 911. to Wisconsin : .At the conclusion of the 1916 season. Wisconsin had settled back to await developments of the Marvard regime, which had been fairly successful The results were not completely to the liking of Wisconsin students and alumni, but they had been so much more gratifying than the two or three seasons that preceded that followers were easily sjitisfied. It was agreed that Dr. Withington had done as well as could be exp .cted under the conditions. Then came the war. With the war came the request of Hr. W iihinglon for a leave of absence in order to go into war service. MlinilltlUIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIMIMIIIIi: illlllllllHIIMIIIIIIIII IIIIIMIIIMIMIIIIIIIIIMIMIIIIIIIIIIIM - With the war came the flocking of football stars to the colors. With the war came a general disorganization of things pertaining to athletics and the discon- tinuance of athletics for the spring period. Gradually, however, things began to adjust themselves. The athletic council, following the conference action, decided to continue athletics in the fall. After some deliberation, it was de- cided to invite John Richards back to handle the football situation. This was in the summer. In the early fall, Coach Richards returned to Madison as head coach and he found before him the most disappointing outUxik that c er any coach faced. John Richards is no shirker. He ' s always optimistic. He dcK-sn ' t need ready-made material. I Ic prides himself on being a coach who can dc clop men. There was a fair nucleus of material back but many of the men were in scholastic difficulties. The training facilities at Camp Randall were in topsy-turvy condition. It was nearly a month after the opening of the season before some of the eligibility knots were untangled and it was not until after the .season closed that anything like commodious quarters were arranged at Camp Randall. This will give you an idea of the things that John Richards was up again.st. .■ nd — here ' s the worst part of it. He had not made up his own schedule. The ' -chedulc had been left as a legacy. It called for games with Notre Dame and Illinois early in the --eason and rKither Notre Dame nor Illinois arc rated as being weaklings. 14 nitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiitiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiR Putr lf ' 7 :iniiiiiiiiriiiiintiiiii ' ' i;i!!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiitiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiniiiiiiiiiiiinitMiiiiiiiMiriiiiiri!i ' - This aindition made it necessary for 0)ach Richards to pick his team early and lo trv and round It into shape as soon as possible He could not work upon any particular offensive because he had to spend all his time on defensi e work He did, and Wisconsin held Notre Dame to a tic People were somewhat dissatisfied Not those who knew conditions, but those who take each game as it comes and who fail to consider that the purpose of preliminary games is to develop the team for the championship tJames to come. They also failed to Rive Notre Dame credit for ha ing a strong team. Next came Illinois and the Badgers were defeated bv the narrow margin of seven points It was in this game that Wisconsin really first began to show the results of Richards ' coaching for the Badgers outplayed the lllini and, but for a few unfortunate breaks, would have won. It was a defeat that, instead of causing the usual gl K m. was taken with the philosophical feeling of better things to come. ' The Minnesota game was the one that started everyone running for the hand-wagon. Hailed as conference champions, the Gophers came out of the north prepared to repeat the trick turned at Minneapolis the vear before. They returned on the short end of a 10 to 7 score and they were lucky to get the seven It was the biggest upset of the year In that game C oach Richards made gcxxj the claims of his friends for, with inferior material he had his team worked up to -.uch a pitch that losing was not in their ocabulary f, Ml lUtlMtllinitlltlllMIIIIIIUIIIMMIlltMllllllhlHIIMIilllllllllMlllllimilMIMII IIIIIIIilUllllllllllllltllllltllllirilKtHltlllR rate lt S iiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ' Ohio State profited by the Minnesota game and defeated the tired Wisconsin team after a hard battle the followins week, and then the season closed with Wisconsin defeating Chicago for the first time since 1 ?0I on Chicagos field Two defeats were chalked up against the Badgers, who were entitled to ranking in third position in the conference race. Anyone who had predicted victories over Minnesota and Chicago at the beginning of the season would have been classified as a fit subject for the insane asylum. Yet that ' s what happened. It happened for just one reason and that reason was John R. Richards, who was capably as- sisted by Tom Jones and Guy Lowman. the new basketball coach John Richards knows football and he is especially versed in conference football He knows isconsin conditions He is a i scons in alumnu and a loyal alumnus at that. But his chief qualification for the lob is his ability to make men like him and respect him. There isn ' t a man on the squad who would not have given his life almost for the coach It is this quality ol leader- ship that counts more than anything else. He inspires his men in the right way and any man who receives coaching under him is entitled to respect as a truly Wisconsin man. Richards has been re-engaged for another year — miybc more. It is now practically settled that upon his shoulders will fall the task of developing a Wisconsin system — one that will gi e Wisconsin her old place on the football field — a feared rival for any team. This he will succeed in doing. IIIMIIMIIflllillllllU ' !liMII:l?IIIIIIIIIMIIIIItfllllllllllltlllllltlMIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIi: 1917 Homecomitifr Pro rram Soiumber 2, J, 4 Friday, . oivmher 2 7:I5- :0()P M — Mass meeting- Formal opcnin;; ol the I loniccDmirif; festivities at L ' nlvcr- sitv Ciymnasium 9:15 P M — Bonfire and Fireworks on Lower Campus Saturday, . ovember RcKistrution of Alumni opens at Alumni Headquarters, State Street, opposite Library. — Alumni (Council Meeting. Parlors of Lathrop Hall. Alumni Board .Meeimn Parlors of Lathrop Hall. l jass Reunion Dinners. — Band met on Lower Campus and parades to Camp Randall in escort of the Guests of Llonor. Kick-off. isconsin-Minnesoia {j ' lnie Final score -Wisconsin ID. Minnesota 7 — Fnd of Fir i I kill L ' orm.il dedication of the New Stadium at (Uimp Randall. Go crnor Lmanuel 1. Philipp and President C harles R ' an Hise. oKiciatinj; i:(HI— HumecominK Reception for Alumni and Visitors Park)rs ol Uithrop I kill — (-kiss Reunion Oinners — I kimecominn liall a.nd .Alumni Reunion. L ' niversity Gymnasium •Sunday, .Xoivmlvr 4 3 (M) — Biind C Concert. First Reuimcnt liiind. I. ' niversitv Gymnasium. 9:(X) 10.00 1 1 ;00 12:50 1:30 2 m 4 m 7 m  m iiucil.f of I lor or al Cami ' Cjovernor Fmanuel L Philipp, President Charles R a Ij rd. 04. Walter Alexander. 97. Prof, H L Ihorkelson. W c; A R Hise. I M I kinimond. lohn S. I McKav. G . R . II W ' . R.hkJ. iiiliUlilllllllllllllllllllHIIIIMIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIillllllUlllllllllll Patr I -I ' Jlllllltllllllllllllll! Ulllllllllllllllll ' IIIIIIIIMUIIIIIIMIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Homecomitifi at Wisconsin 1917 EOMECOMING at Wisconsin last fall was featured by the Bajjicr eleven ' s 10 to 7 victory over Minnesota ' s title-seeking football machine. More than any other one thing, this win pleased the returned graduates greatly, for they remembered the long and successful Gopher gridiron regime, and the recent string of victories for the Northmen in games x ith Wisconsin. Minnesota took the field on Homecoming day hea y favorites, but were beaten from the initial whistle. Wisconsin had worked all season with just one game in mind, the contest with Minnesota, and the team was ready when the day came. After week on week of solving Minnesota shifts in practice, the Badgers broke up every attempt of the Gophers to gain. and. once in possession of the ball, took the heart out of the enemy w ith the most daring forward-pass game ever staged on a conference gridiron. Minnesota cried Basketball! as Simpson shot pass after pass over the Gopher defense for gains, but the new game triumphed o cr the old. and Wisconsin left the field a ictor. HiiuuuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiilMiiiiiiiiiiiiir Pat ' I -I Ki ' Miiiimimii ' MllllllltltlllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllltllllllMlllilllillllllllllillllllllU - !CJ 1USM .1.1.111 ,,,iiiiii(iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiin iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiniHiiMitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiimiiimiimmiiiiir. BASKET BALL tnillllllllinntT- ' v; ' !!l|||IMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIItllllllllllMIIIII1llll • % B DMITW ( ' apiain-clcci (.,, i f I ;i , . toiul riils W.in Lcvt Pet. Wisconsin • . 750 Minnesota .700 Northwestern 5 .025 Illinois o .5(M) Chicago . l-- . 500 Purdue 5 500 Indiana 3 . 5(K) Ohi. . , . 1 4 444 . ni| Officers William S . Chandler Cafilain Gforgf. E. V N Hacen Manager Gl Y 5. Lo VM. N Coach Personnel WiLi.i.AM Sti:i ' hen C handler W . . C x-nter LiBFR Howard SI 1PS J W ... Left C uard Haroli V. Brock W Right Guard [Ldwin a. Swinsen •W Right Guard .• ntiionv G. Zllper W Left Forward LoRENZ J. MaISEL W Right Forward Harold Knai ' p W Forward Carl P. B.- t er W Forward Harlow H. Pease aWa ...... Guard VIartin a. Fladoes aWa Guard S. Llewellyn Spen -.LER aWa Forward Frank ' . Birch aWa . . ( Juard Rcsu Its of Season Dec. 8 — Wisconsin . 3i ' tkl .it . 21 at Madison IXc. 1 3 — Wisconsin . ' 33 Ripon 13 at Madison Dec. 15 — Wisconsin . IM Northwestern C ollese 13 at Madistin Dec. 19 — Wisconsin . . 15 .Marquette 14 at Madison Jan. 2 — Wisconsin . 35 Ripon lb at Ripon Jan. 5 — Wisconsin . 17 Northwestern 33 at F anston Jan. 8 — Wisconsin . 3b Iowa ... 22 at Iowa City Jan. 20 — Wisconsin . 22 Illinois 21 at Champaign Jan. 21 — Wisconsin . 34 Iowa 19 at Madison Jan. Feb. 2b — Wisconsin . 21 Purdue .... lb at Madison 1(1 — Wisconsin . 21 Chicago .... 23 at ( hicago r-cb. 23 -Wisconsin •. 23 Illinois 15 at Madison Mar 2 — Wisconsin . 18 Minnesota 17 al Minneapolis Mar 7— Wisconsin . 2b Northwestern 18 at Madison Mar 9 —Wisconsin . lb C ' .hicano . 13 at Madison Mar 13 — Wisconsin . 24 Purdue ... IS at LaFayctlc Mur lb — Wisconsin 11 Minnesota M at Madison li tiiiilllllllllllHMIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMMIIIIIIIl illMIMIIIIIIII illllMIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlHIMIIIMIIIIIinillllllllllillllli. The 1917-1 S 1 iirsitv Basketball Team -.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiimuiuiuiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiniiiiiiiiiiiHuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiniiiniiHiiiiMiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin iiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiii: S) Another Championship Team 15 t AIMAlX Bill. ( .1 IAM)I-I-R C l I1-: basketball season ol C j| ' ' ' ' K - ' through. V anvihint; but bright. du( 1 117-18 was one of the best and most successful seasons Wisconsin At the beginning of the year prospects for a good season were ling but bright, due to the loss of such men as Carlson, Meyers, Hemming, and Mcin- tosh, who entered military service, and the graduation of Levis and Olsen. With but two veter- ans left. Mr Lowman. who succeeded Dr. Meanwell as coach, began what was generally expected at that time by the student body to be a poor year. Many thought that Dr Nleanwell was the onlv man who knew anything about basketball, and that by losing Doc we were losing our chances lor a winning team. But from the start Cxwch Lowman showed his knowledge of bas- ketball, and. after cutting the squad down to twelve men just before the practice games, improve- ment was rapid The preliminary games were won by close margins, and a favorable season was not anticipated by the fans. .At first the men lacked teamwork as well as headwork. but a gradual change took place, and the team play grew belter On January 8 we lost our first conlerence game, on the Northwestern floor, by the score of 33 to 17 The result of this game was the best thing that could have hapF)ened to the team. It made the men realize the hard |ob they had. and created a desperate, winning spirit Not discouraged, the team went to Iowa and won. 3l- to 23 Iowa was again beaten, on our own fltx)r, and then Purdue went home . with a 21 to lb beating. Illinois was another ictim. _ 22 to 21. We lost the next game to C ' .hioigo. 23 to ■■ H k 21, though the score diKs not show the true strength of the teams, Wisconsin outplaying the Maroons, but K ha ing hard luck in shooting. Illinois and Chicago look k Ix-atings. and isconsin gained a commanding lead by W L Ixating Minnesota, 18 lo 17. at Mirineapolis. Norlh- H. %estern was then eliminated from the race by being ' L. H handed a licking here, 2o to 18. Purdue was then the E - .inly team lo stand between us and the title and we tt)ok care of that at UiFayette, clinching the championship with a win, 24 to 18. When the team returned from the Purdue game, it was met al the depot by 300 students, who .showed their ap- preciation of the learn with a demonstration that has never K-en excelled by Wisconsin students Minnesota won from us in the last game of the season here. The success of the team was due to the ability of CxMch Lowman. the ciKiperalion and good feeling which existed among the players, and the support of the student IxxJy ■t I iiitHiMiniillliiiiiilllllillilllllliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMlliliiiiiiillllllllllllllllJUIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIi; JiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiniiiiiiriiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniMiiiiiiuiiniiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiL The 1917-18 Basketball Season Bv Guy S. Lowman Vy i ' ! H the fifth Conference championship in seven years safely tucked away. Wisconsin J J .in look back with pride upon the reco rd of the 1917-18 basketball team, which lost only three games in a total of twelve, after a hard season of up-hill play. The prospects for a winning team at the start of the season were poor, a championship would have been consid- ered unattainable. Captain Chandler and Simpson were the only two men back from last sea- son ' s squad, and the material for the other positions was green and scarce. The team started discouragingly. being beaten by a top-hea y score by Northwestern in the first game, but rallied with indom- nitable spirit and started a streak of victories which brought the fi e from last to first place. The team would probably have gone through the season without another defeat, had not the defense been cracked just before the game with C ' hicago. when one of the guards was lost at the end of the first semes- ter. .After this game, however, the team hit its stride again, and by a great victory over Minnesota and a dazzling win over Purdue clinched the title. The final game of the season was lost to Minnesota, mainly be- cause the team let down after its scries of hard battles, knowing thiit the result could not affect the season ' s showing SiMwoN nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllUHIIIMMIIIIIIIilMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII m iiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilllililliiMlllllliliiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiii; The Scoring Records a API . MX BILL ( I l. NI ' )LER of the Wisconsin quintet lived up to his three-year reputa- tion as a point-better last season by ranking second to Cjptain Anderson of Illinois in the final records (.aptain Gorgas of C ' hicago was third. C handler was one point ahead of Ckir{;as. and trailed Andersi)n by 52 points. Chandler was second best shot from the field, leading Gorgas by three goals, but the Marix)n garnered fi e more shots from the free-throw mark. Eber Simpson led all the conference guards in baskets from the field, though C.hurch of Pur- due outscored him because of his chances to get points on free throws. Zulfer was si.Meenth in the final list of point scorers; Simpson was eighteenth ..VlaiscI was thirty- second: Knapp was thirty-seventh: Swinson was sixty-fourth: and Brock was sixty-seventh. ITie scoring records of the highest twentv in the conference were: B. F .• nderson, Illinois 50 Chandler, Wisconsin 2 ' Gorgas, Chicago 2ti Gillcn, .Minnesota 40 .Markley. Purdue 42 L ' nderhill. Northwestern 18 Davies, Ohio 37 X ' ollmer, C hicago 35 Marquard. Northwestern . 32 Church. Purdue 12 ' on Lackum, Iowa .... 10 . 1 Total o5 lo5 55 113 (M) 112 20 lOf. 84 47 83 2 7o 70 3 (V 30 o3 41 ol Francis, Ohio . . . Campbell. Purdue . Kingsley, Minnesota .■ rnt -on. Minnesota Zulfer, W isconsin I ' ilson. Purdue Simpson. W isconsin C-otton, Iowa . . . Hinkle, Chicago . . Berrien, Iowa . . . Kennedy, Ohio . . B. F, . r. Total t) 58 5o 5t 3 55 54 52 52 23 49 48 48 48 hitlivitliKil Ri ' iordt Player Halves Pl.iv. ! Field (;,,,K Free 1 Made hrow?. .Missed Total Points Personal Fouls Techni- cal Fouls 23 4 23 K 22 15K 13 3.4 1 1 , ' i K ' i 2 ' 5 27 2Ci 15 7 2 I 55 38 1 113 54 52 30 14 4 2 8 13 20 13 5 10 17 7 1 2 5 Zulfer 15 Maisel 2 3 3 Brock 1 1 Birch Pease 1 Spenijler lOIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIilllllllllllllllll Illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllll h CROSS-COUNTRY iiiiiiMiiiiMnNiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniMiii: yj_ CROS OVMRY 4- v-i. hdL. Davt C r ' ain-filcct Demmek GoLDiiS. Ca jlain Harold Bkyam, Manager William Howison, Assislani A una vr Gp.oRt.r. BtiNiSH. Coach Personnel DlMMLK GilLDI N. WiLLARD L. DAVroN, V Br-RNARDO W. tlLSOM, W Ronald W. Ramsly, aW ' a Bi;rn,ari E. MiiviiRS, aWa F-RANK R. ODoNNiiLL. aWa ( ;lvi i-; L. Nash. aVVa ' .• ' • illiltMillllllllllllillllllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIMIIIMIIIIjllllllMIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIT Patr ISO Dllllllllllllll lllllllnlllllllllllllllllllllllllllll lnlllllllltllllllltlllllllllllllll : The 7 Wir.sity (.ross-C.ouiitrx I cum «i Hf iiinuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiR Hat, ISI niuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiillii ' iiiniiiiiiiiiiiiii il GoLOi-N. Captain 1917 arsity Cross-Cotintry By (Im ' tain Demmf.r Golden In consideration of the fact that it was an off year, the 1917 Cross-Country season was success- ful. Some of our def endable men did not return to school and the war cut down the squad to almost a minimum. Burr, who would have been a strong contender for first honors, did not return, and several other prospective W men were not back, but in spite of that Wisconsin put out a good team . The Minnesota meet was a great success, for wc decisively defeated the Gopher sextette o cr their course at Minneapolis In that meet the six men of the team showed that they were of championship caliber and e ery one of them ran a game race. This ' is ' evldenccd by the fact that we had our entire team over the line before the first .Minnesota man had finished. Dayton, who came in first, ran the course in time which was but 3 seconds hchmd the Minnesota record held by Watson, and the rest of the team was close on his heels. Wisconsin was again successful in the annual conference meet held at Washington Park, Chicago. There the team was the second in the Western conference to finish. In spite of the cold day and the fact that the course was entirely snow-covered, almost all of the men ran well. The .season brought some good material to light. Elsom. especially, developed fast, and from the beginning showed that he was Varsity material. 1 le prc) ed it by taking tenth place in the conference run Meyers showed marked development and Ram- ey. O D.mnell. and Nash ran well at almost all times. The Non-V ' arsity meets brought out a lot of go; d nuterial. Crump . who won the class, college, and turkey races, is of Varsity speed and would h ive hjlpjd the team if he had been eligible for Varsity competition. At present the prospects for next season arc very bright, and Wisconsin should have a cham- pionship team if the war docs not cut in on the team ' s personnel. All of this year ' s team, with one exception, will be back, with a possibility of Burr ' s returning. With such a bunch as Oayton, Burr. Elsfjm. Nash. Crump. 0 ' l )nnell. Ramsey, and Meyers to pick from, there should be o record-breaking 19IK team. Cojich Benish ' s work was cspccinlly effeclivc In developing green material into good runners and in keeping them in gixxl spirit all during the season. I le. with Man.iger Bryant, has entered the service and will noi be Kick next year. HiiMniitiiiiMiiiiiMiilllllMlii illlllllllllllii iiillllllliliilliiililliiililtlllln ■ illllllllllllllllllllllllllllll iilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilli: K MINNESOTA DUAL CROSS-COLINTRY MEET Minneapolis, Minn., Nov. 10, 1917 Wisconsin, 1 5 points. Minnesota, 40 points. Course — Five Miles Time: 26 minutes, S2 seconds Dayton (Wis), First O ' Donnelu (Wis.). Fourth Golden (Wis), Second Ramsey (Wis.), Fifth Elsoni (Wis.), Third Nash (Wis.), Sixth Skellet (Minn.), Seventh WESTERN INTERCOLLEGI.ATE CROSS-COUNTRY ' CViica ci, ., Nov. 24. 1917 Ames, first . . . 45 points Ohio State, fourth . 80 points Chicago, second 59 points Minnesota, fifth . 87 points Wisconsin, third . 61 points Course— Five Miles Time- 26 minule. , 4S2-S seconds Hawthorne (.-Vmcs) , First Elsom (Wis.), Ninth Otis (Chicago), Second Dayton (Wis.), Tenth McCosH (Chicago), Third Ramsay (Wis.), Eighteenth Golden (Wis.), Fourth Meyers (Wis). Twentieth O ' DoNNELL (Wis.), Twenty-second Tiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiMiiiiiiiiiiiiin lllllMIIIMIMIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIllilllllllllllllllMIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIinilllllllinilll Fourteenth Annual Turkey Race One Olid rliicc-tiiiiii tei -mile course, tlinntjlli the streets. Sovember IS. 1V17 Crlmi ' , first I-i c Turkey HOHLHELD, ' CCond Livc Duck LooMis, third Li c Chicken Martin, la .t An Egg 7 mil- of V inner. Light minutes Ji tcen scicndx. iiiiMMIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIltMllllllllllllllllllllllll IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIr I ' utf IS4 iiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiilllliiiiiiiiiiiiitittiiriiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilllliilt ill IIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIMIIIIIIIIIIIimilllllllllllllllllilllllllltlllllllllHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Illlllllli Paf Iff fM lilllinilHIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIl 1 Iarrv 1 IhiNiii N. (iiptain-clcct The 1918 Indoor Track Season By 1 l-_. j,.Ms With practically every man of the championship track team of l 51b back in schtxjl a year ago, the outlook for a third successive title-winning team in 1917 was of the brightest until the declara- tion of war resulted in the cancellation of spring intercollegiate athletics here. Track work was discontinued and graduation in June marked the passing of a wonderful three-year track squad, one which had made the most successful cinder-path history in Badger annals. The 1918 season started under discouraging conditions. Graduation and enlistments de- pleted the ranks of track men until only three ' • ' V men returned to school. Of these, one more was lost before the first meet when Jimmy Peterson, captain-elect, enlisted. However, a creditable team wasmolded from green men. and it succeeded in taking third place at the Illinois Relay Carnival, and a few weeks later ttxik fourth honors at the lndix)r Conference meet at Evanston. With plenty of time in which to get into shape for the outdoor meets, the team should improve considerably, and make an even better showing than it did during the indoor season. ' iilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMllllllllllMIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIII I ' af 6 ' MIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIiii .iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiii: The 9 (S Wirsity Indoor Truck Squad Hammond CuUcn Gill H Williams Heintzen Andrews Spafford Wolfcrs ich Kdwards Wilson Meyers McCandlcss Ray Morse Malcckar Jones Golden Urech Hcrzfcld [Dennis Crump Ramsey Nash Thomas E. Jones . K, RRV R. Heintzen LoRiNC T. Hammond Officers Coach Captain Manager Personnel Harry R. Heintzen. VV. bO-yard 1 lurdlcs Irving A. Andrews, W. fc 0-yard Hurdles, Broad Jump Demmer Golden. W. Mile, Two Mile Bernardo W. Elsom. V. Mile CrtiRDON W. Crump, W, Mile, Two Mile Henry C. Dennis. W, Mile. Two Mile Edward R Williams. W, High Jump Clyde L. Nash, W. Half Mile William R. MAnr.KAR. 75-yard Dash Ronald W. Ramsey. Half Mile, Mile Robert C. Wolfers. 440-yard Dash Edwin F. VIorse, Half Mile Mairk;e . I 1 Ian.son, Shot Put. Broad Jump ■Allen Spai eord. 440-yard Dash Joseph O. Wilson. High Jump Harold A. Gill. High Jump Kenneth A. Clllen. Half Mile Hst ' Eii H. HsiEH. 75-yard I )ash Leroy E. Edwards. Mile Bernard E. Meyers, Mile Stanley R. McCandless, 75-yard Dash OthoJ. L ' rech, Mile Richard P. Herzeeld. Shot Put C. Harold Ray, 75-yard Dash RECORD OF SEASON March 2 — Illinois Relays, third place March 23 — Indcxir 0)nference Meet, fourth place niiillllillllllllllllllllilliiilillliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii (iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin MlllllllllllllilllHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIMMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIMIIIMIItiMIIMIIIIIIIIIMIIiniMIIIIIIIIIIIMIIMIIIMIIIIl-: Aiiniuil (.oiifcreiice Indoor Track and licld Meet Eianston. Ill . March 23. I9IS The Sc ii-lli,(itil ■■J ■5 c X £§ X i c 3 t 1 , -3 E 1 -0 E 1 £ (2 = I o i i s 1 8 4 5 2 6 - 3 4 3 42 Chicaei 5 i 5 1 1 5 22 2 5 5 1 2 1 16 Illinois 2 3 4  5 2 7 ■ 1 « 3 2 e Indiana 1 3 i 4 3 1 4 Eeenl F,nl Secotut ThirJ Fourth Record 50.yard Diivh . . . Johnson (Mich) rocllin (Mich) Carroll (III) Collier (Ind) :05 2 5 One-mile Run . . . Otis (C) Sc-dHwick (Mich) Golden ( V) Donnelly (Mich) 4:30 2 5 Pole Vault . . . , Cross (Mich) Kicfcr (P) iLanK (III) iLult (111) II ft . 1 in 440-varJ Da-h . . . 1 cucr-tcin (C) BriRfts llnd) l-orbcs (Mich) 1 Inmilton (N) :52 1 .5 on-vard 1 liRh 1 lurdks . Johnson (Mich) Hcint:cn (W) Andrews (W) Zocllin (Mich) :07 4 5 Two-mile Run . . . Otis (C) Dennis (W) Crump ( ) Little (P) 10 03 4 5 HiKhJump . . Johnson (Mich) Linn (N) (Williams iW) Hainh iMich) ' Later (Mich) 5 ft . 10 in 8«0.yQrd Run . . . 1 luuscr (Minn) Stoll (Mich) Nnsh (W) Greene (C) 2:03 4 5 Stv.l f ' ut . . . . 1 Uaker (Mich) .Weiss (111) 1 luuscr (Minn) Jackvon (C) 30 ft . 8 ' , (Vic-milc Rclav . . . Chicafjo (urtis Kcnnc ly Annin Fuucrstcin Michiunn Northwestern iM;ons,n 3:3t 2 5 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliilillllllliiiMiMir .Illllllllllllllll iiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiniMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiie Second Stiilc Ititer-Collciic Indoor Track Meet Gymnasium . Annt ' .t. March ' , h lS ■3 i i ' c 3 3 a: o 2 6 3 c 3 1 1 2 5 3 i 1 4 a 1 i in •a I2 1 } 3 5 8 8 2 8 2 lU 8 2 1 8 1 U 6 5 6 5 10 1 5 3 2 1 8U 22 12 Bcloit 4 ■IO- ar,l l ish Firll «Sra nti Third Fourth Record Schmicgc (L) Hamm (R) Wi.lfcrMW) Malcckar (W) Pole Vault M 3 5 Baker (W) Shape ( V) No third No fourth A i(e Run 10 feet. 6 inches Crump (W) Elsom (%■) Learned (L) Babcock (B) ■lO-yarJ High Hurdles 4:43 2 5 Andre (W) Heinuen (W) Hamm (Ri WmKert (B) 440-yard Dash-I :0S 2 5 Maleckar (W) Lucas (B) Zerler (R) W inRcrt iB) 55 3 5 WolfCTX (W) Karger(W) Winder (L) 440-, ,rJ l ,sh—ll High Jump :5t. 1,5 Willianw (W) Wilson (W) Sundt (R Rowc (B) Tuv M,le Run 5 feet, inches Golden (W-) Dcnnb(W) Babcock (B) Heller (R) Broad Jumft 10 14 3 5 Sundt (R) Andrews (W) McCandlew (W) Wilson (W) Shoi Pill 21 feet. 5 ' J inches Loot (R Hanson (W) Henfeld W) Mueller (W) W feet, ti inches Evara (W VlcGuire W) Bayonet Contejt gSO-yard Run Na9h(W) Lrcch (W) Vtorsi (W) NWgan (R) 2 0«1 5 Three-quarter Mite Reiay LawrerKc Bcloit  inni ut felay Team—Maleeker. Vol eri. Karfer. Ray -.lllMIIIMIIIIIIIIMIl illllllllllllltillllllllillllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Paie IS9 .Hiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii. iVoi ' Vt ' Indoor Track Meet — Artiiy vs. Navy Gymnasium Annc ' x, December ' . 7 Navy, b8;4 Army, 52K The Score-Board ■o o 40-vard High Hurdles 4S-yard Low Hurdles One Lap Two Laps 440- yd Dash 880-yard Run Onc-milc Run Two-Mile Run II i 1 Pole Vault Shot Put Relay 1 1 Navy j 4 1 5 9 8 5 4 4 3 sy, 6 6 5 bsy. Army. 5 8 4 1 4,5 5 b K 3 3 8 i ny. Event 40- YARD Dash 40-YARD High Hurdles 45-YARD Low Hurdles One Lap Two Laps 440-yard Dash 880-yard Run Mile Run Two-milk Rl n High Jump Broad Jump Pole Vault Shot Put Relay First Second Third Matchcttc (A) McCandlcss (N) Pauly (N) Rccd (A) Spafford (N) Spafford (N) McCandlcss (N) Marsh (N) Pickard (A) Pickard (A) Brothers (A) Matchcttc (A) Littig (N) Van Natta (N) Pauly (N) Larson (A) Won by Navy. Matchcttc (A) McCandlcss (N) Littig (N) Hall (A) Dennis (N) Cullcn (N) Brown (N) Van Natta (N) Gill (N) Matchcttc (A) Matchcttc (A) Mueller (A) Hall (A) Pauly (N) Stcrnlicb (A) Osgood (A) Smith (N) Dennis (N) Fee (A) Wilson (N) Rccd (A) Ma rsh (N) Littig (N) No third tied Record :05 05 4-5 17 3o3-5 58 3-5 II 2-5 04 3-5 30 3-5 5 ft., 10 in. 20 ft , 4 in. 10 ft.. C in. 33 ft., «in. lillllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllt ;:uillllllMilliiiililiilliiiiii :(lllli t ' liiiMillitlli: Twelfth Atiniml W Relay Carnival Gymnaxium Annex, AIiia i I , I ' fIX Event First Second Third 40-yard Dash . . . Maleckar tcCiindlcss Wolfers llighjump Wilson Gill Williams Shot Put ... . Blatter Hipkc Mueller Inter-Company Relay Co. B Co. L Co. 1 40-yard High Hurdles Andrews Heint;cn Matchettc 45-yard High Hurdles Andrews Matchcttc Heintzcn Inter-Fratcmity Relay Beta jChi Psi Nash. I Sigma Nu Barnes, Swenson, Woodward, Goerlit:, Wolfers Running Broad Jump ■• ndrews Hsich Spafford Inter-Lit. Soc. Relay Hcsperia Philomathia Intcr-Sorority Relay . ■Alpha Gam. Delt Schumakcr. Scheidenham, Puchner, Dennis a Gam Phi Beta Alpha Phi Record 05 5 ft., 9 in. 35 ft., 2 ' i in. 1 :47 2 , ' 5 ;06 2 5 ;05 3 5 I 42 4 ' 5 19 ft, II 155 8:35 3 5 Correspondence Group Hifj h Jump yVlSCONSIN ' S high jumpers scored a victory o cr Ohio State on May 19, 191 , in a cor- 11 I rcspondence group meet, the first of what is hoped to be a scries of such athletic con- tests. In the meet, 25 Wisconsin athletes jumped at Camp Randall, while a similar number of Ohio State men jumped at Columbus. Their jumps were scored on the basis of 100 points for a jump of 5 feet 8 inches, with a proportionate decrease for every inch below that mark. Wisconsin, whose 25 jumpers averaged 5 feet 3 72 ,100 inches, won with 2,088 point-, out of a possible 2.500. Ohio State scored 1.720 points. Illinois Relay Carnival Lrbantj. i u ' i.i. . LirJ: ; ' );. y I ISCONSIN carried off third honors at the annual Illinois Relay Carnival by placing third ■ I J in each of the one. two, and four mile relay races. Chicago won all three races and ■ Illinois irK k second in each. .Andrews took Wisconsin ' s only point-- in the --pecial held events, placing third in the high and low hurdle races. .Michigan scored most of the points in these events. niiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiililiiliiiiiMiiiiiiiMllllilliiiiillllllllltlllilliniiiiiiiiiiilllillii; I ' lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltllllllll .IIIIIMIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Second Aiiniuilliitcr-Conipany IndoorTrackM eet Oxmnasnim : nnfx, March S, 19IS The Score-Board , „ t — ■3 ■3 -3 6 1 1 1 c 3 d. 1 6 a 2 1 I 6 6 3 ■2 a - i c c c (3 a 1 1 1 1 7 ! , 1 t 7 8 4 4b 4 5 b 1 27 1 1 4 4 5 2J, ' ; 6 5 1 7 4 20 Company B 5 l 7 1 5 7 17 Comnnnv K J I, 1 5 4 I5ii p L_ • A •i 5 5 15 1 7 7 8 7 1 7 8 Company M 2 ' 3 b Fourncs , (B) l auly (El Fourncis (B) Malchcttc (L) Chamhcrlain (L) McCartney (G) Hohlfcld (A) Brothers (D) (B) Pauly (E) Rccd (D) Kayscr (K) Hohlfcid (A) Edwards (F) Pauly (E) Schumakcr (L) Hall (M) MctUirtncy (G) Schumakcr (L) Kourncss (Hi Smith (Kl Klappriiih (ID Hohlfcid (A) Rccd(D) McGuirc (L) Gardner (G) Ikrnhard (C,} Moth (L) i ' jtmrutny L (j rnpan I- 40- ard Dash ThuJ Fourth Matchctic (L) Hall (M) 4i-yurJ Low HurJUs Stcrnlicb (1.) l-ranklin (I ' ) Shot Put Smith (K r-ranklin (F) M,le Run Lindcmann ( ' .) Finkcrton (D) I ' oU ault Matchcttc (I.) No fourth ■ID-yard High HurJUa Slcrnhcb (L) Smith (Kl 440.yarJ Dash Mitchell (C) r-ulton (H) SSO-yard Run Phillips (Hi I ' ltus (D) ll.ghjmnp Wicsncr Hit Paulv (E) Kccxl (Dl Running iiroad Junifi Pauly (l;i Schwart: (I ) JuyonW Contest Evans (1.) Johnson (H) •Vruruiinx liroad Jum0 Schwart: l ' ) Wioncr (C) Rrlay Ract (  m|s inv F ' (lomp myCi Fi th I ' eldmann (G) R,-cord :04 4 5 Hall (Ml ;0S 4,5 Pauly (E) 36 ft , ' lm. Uidcr (L) 5:05 I- ' clUmann (G) Kayscr (K 0:10 4,5 No fifth 10 ft. SulhlT (K) :lHs3 S No fifth :58 1 5 Pinkcrton (D) 2:1b 2,5 5 ft . 4 in. Wicsncr (C) 18 ft . 2 i Kliipproth 1 1-) 8 It . 11 in, (  mpan 11 111 (tllllllllllinilllllllllllMMMHIIIIIIIUIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIimillllllllllllllllllllli nagr I I2 jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii. iiiliiiiiiiiiHHniiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiliiiiiinn iiiMiiiiiniMMiiiiiiiiiiii ' - Infcr-Scholiistic I rack unci Field Meet C ' am 1 Randall. May 2o, f l The Score-Board t ■s 1 ■2 1 c 02 i ■2 3 2 a. 2 ■2 c f c 3 CO 2 a t 1 i. 1 i 6 1 f 1 Chippcua Falls 1 n 1 2 tirand Rapids 5 3 5 3 3 1 5 5 1 0 Mndi-on 8 MiUaukcc. East 22j; MiUi.ukcc, West ... 4 3 (1 6 1) II Milwaukee, North. .. 5 3 ; 3 3 19 MiUaukcc, South 1 (I (1 3 ■ h 3 IH MiUnukcc. Wash..,. 3 5 Rite Lake (1 ft 8 3 5 3 3 3 19 W.sccrxsm High 7 Event First Second Third Record Shot Put Sundt (S) Jacobscn (S) Franklin (MS) 45 ft., 4}i in. Mile Rln Roberts (ME) Loomis ( V) Hammcttcr (MW ' s) 4 53 3-5 Hiscis Rocssler (MN) Liskovic (LC) Holzwarth (W) 113 ft. 1 20- YARD HlRDLES Matchcttc (ME J Reed (MN) Shcelcy (CF) : lb 3-5 1 00- YARD Dash Lshcr (S) Foley (MVV) Shattuck (MWD) 10 4-5 Pole Vault Weeks (LC) Pauly (M V) Schwenkcr (M) All tied. 10 ft 4 40- YARD Dash Spetz (MN) Meyer (MS) Scherer (ME) :53 High Jump Regct (LC) Dietrick (MWg) Weeks (LC) 5 ft.. 6;; in 220-YARD Dash Foley (M V) Lshcr (5) John (MW) :23 4-5 2 20- YARD Hurdles Matchettc (ME) Schneider (MN) Hoffer (CF) ■.27 Javelin Norcm (MS) Stolbcts iMN; Hammcttcr (MWg) 153 ft . 2 in. HAL - llLE Kayser (M) Ramsey vW) Schlacger (ME) 2 :0t-. 3-5 Hammer Traynor (MS) Jacobscn (S) Portratz (MS) 120 ft. 7 in. Broad Jump- Matchcttc (ME) Franklin (MS) Rcgct (LC) 20 ft.. 3 in. Relay M. S 1 W l. E. 1 :39 4-5 UIIIIIIUIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIinillMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlr Patt Iti HilUIMIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Illllllllii illlllllllliilllli Track Records liunl W isconstn R,. i ' rJ Conference Record Worlds Record I0()-YARI1 1 SII E.J. Fox. ISW G. C. PoiiRc, 1903 r. L. Waller, 1007 H. B, Mcvcrs. mw A. R. Tormcv. 9 A . B x th, 1915 Tom Cascv. 19 Id C. B. Smith, l9Io 10 seconds Blair. 1903, Chi. Mav. 1907. Ill Ward, 1915. Chi. 9 4-S seconds Kcllv. 1906. U. S. Drew. 1914, U. S. 9 3-5 seconds 220- YARD OaSM C. B. Smith, !91b 21 3-5 seconds C. B. Smith. 1910. W. Ward. 1915. Chi. Hahn. 1903, Mich. 21 3-S seconds Wcfers, 1890. U. S. Kellv. I90o. U. S. Craig, 1910, V. S. Lippincott. 1913. U. S. Drew, 1 )14, U. S. Parker. 1914. U. S. 21 1-5 seconds 440- YARD Dash G. C. Poagc, 1903 49 2-S seconds Dismond, 1916, Chi. Long, 1900, L ' . S. 47 2-S seconds 47 seconds 880-YARD Run Dow Harvey, 191b 1 min., SS 3-S seconds Scott, 1916. Miss. Ag. min.. Si IS seconds Meredith. 1916, V S. min.. 52 1-5 seconds Mile Run E.J. Dohmcn, 1911 4 min., 21 seconds Fall. 1917. Ober. 4 min., 15 4-5 seconds Taber, 1915. U. S. 4 min., 12 3-5 seconds Two-mile Run George Bcnish, 1916 9 min., 41 IS seconds Stout. 1916. Chi. 9 min., 29 3-5 seconds Shrubb, 1904, Eng. 9 min, 9 3-5 seconds 1 20- YARD Hurdles F. G. Nat wick. 1909 5 3-S seconds Simpson. 1916. Mo. 14 3-5 seconds Simpson, 1910. U.S. 14 3-5 seconds 220-YARD 1 ll RDLLS G. C. Poage. 1903 25 seconds Simpson. I9lb. Mo. 23 4-5 seconds Kraenzlcin, 1898, U. S. Wendell, 1913, L ' . S. Simpson, 1916. L ' . S. 23 3-5 seconds HicH Jump Bob Wahl, 1915 6 feel. 1 1-2 inches Bob Wahl. 1915, W. 6 feel, 1 1-2 inches Bccson. 1914. V S. 6 feel, 7 5-1 1 inches Broad Jump Phil Stiles, 1915 24 feel, 1-2 inch Phil Stiles. 1915. W. 23 feet. 9 3-4 inches O ' Connor. 1901. Ire. 24 feel, 1 1 3-4 inches Pole Vault J. K. Gold. 1913 12 eel, S 1-4 inches J. K. Gold. 1913. W. 12 feel. S 1-4 inches Wright. 1912, U. S. 13 feel. 2 1-4 inches Disf:us Ti mow Arlic Mucks. 1916 ISS feel, 8 inches Arlic Mucks. 1916. W. 155 feel, 2 inches Mucks, 1910, U. S. 155 feel. S inches Shot Put Arlic Mucks. 1910 49 feet. 4 1-2 inches Rose. 1904. Mich. 47 feel. 1-4 inch Rose, 1909, U. S. 51 feel Hammer Throw A. A. lohnson. 1907 l47 ' eel, 4 1-2 inches Shattuck. 1913. Cal. 160 feel, 4 inches Ryan, 1913, U.S. 189 feel. t 1-2 inches Javelin Throw Arlic Mucks. 1916 141 feel, 4 1-2 inches HigRins, 1917. Chi. 194 feel. II inches F. M Melms, l914,Sw. 207 feel, 7 3-4 inches ' iMMiii,i(i(iiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiilliillililiiliiiiiiiiiiiiin iiiiiMtiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitin •IIIIMIIIMIIIIIIHIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIII lllllllllllllllllllllllillllllMMIIIIIIMMUIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIMIMIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIItC Nutliinul Alhlclic irate Si iiici Delta Psi •wimWul Indiana I ni.erjilv. 1112 W M.omin. f ' l; Chapter Roll Indiana Univbrsity University of Minnesota Hanover Collec-.e Wabash College Blttler College University of Maine Whitman College DePaiw Lnivermt LoMUARD College University of Coi. Colorado College University of Texas N. D Agricltlti- ' Ral College University of Kansas Qualifications for Memhership Track — • 100-yarJ JoNh— 1 1 J-5scconds 1 20-yord hurdles — 20 seconds 220.yafd low hurdles— II seconds RunninR htnh jump — 5 feet RunninR brood jump — 17 feet Sh H put ( Ik lb l — 10 feet l Proportionate to Pole vault — 8 ' cet o inches Throwinii baseball— 251) feet on fly Punimg football— 120 feet on fly 100-yard • im — (Continuous without resit 2-milc run — 12 minutes 15 scei r ds lO-milc walk— 2 hours JO minutes TimBLINT. — Front handsprmiS Hafxl stand— 10 •secorKl. Front divc fnim both feet over 4 iwit oh-lacle PoSTimii — Correct poMurc. especially of hc d Tweniy-eiRht Wiscomm athletes tried to pass the membership tests for SiRina Delta Psi in the lirst year of its ex- Btence here Thev were Meade Burke. Al Sands. CXmald Dn. i. Walter Kuehn. Ray McCmrv. f larold Knapp. ten Cox. Carman Smith. Jamc!. Peter«n. llarrv Field. H n«i Nelson. Allen Spallord. Hernordo l:isom. Will.om Maleckar. Andrew Andrews. lUl Williamv Robert Till««.n. Melsin (Ma-t. Ed Schriink. Arlie Schardt. l£bcr Simpson. John Mitchell. Oiase DnnoUvm. Harry Heintren. Russell Putnam and David HIattner. Four men. Hurke. 17, S«nds. H. Dix. i. 17. and Kuehn. 20. passed the tests All arc now in war service NfcCrory. Knapp and Cm failed of membership by a nurrt.w marRin. each missinB out on one test McCror ' lacked the two-mile run. ar d Krvipp and Cjox each foiled on the hand stand illlllMHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIimillllilllli: 13 (MllttUiltt Patf « iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir; iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiii:: mill iiiiiiiiinillllllllilllllilllllillllllliiillllUllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli ' I ' agt 196 .IIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII, lllllllllllllllllllllllll iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiil: The Baseball Season By Eber Simpson ' The 1917 baseball season started off in good shape. With a good man in every position and a fine string of substitutes, the spring training trip was a success. Si. games were played and only one was lost, that to Notre Dame. Had a return game been played we could have shown them something, too. It certainly looked like a championship team. The men were just begin- ning to become proficient and our chances seemed rosy, when the faculty cancelled our intercol- legiate schedule, bringing the season to a close. This season the team should be as good as last, though an entirely new lineup will be pre- sented. Under the careful tutelage of Coach Lowman, who has a record of being a past master at the art of turning out winning baseball teams, we may look for big things. The indoor train- ing this spring has worked wonders for the candidates and they ha e learned to bunt properly, to steal bases scientifically, and the correct mcth(xls of tagging a runner and throwing. Since other conference schools, as well as Wisconsin, have had their baseball chances severely hit by the war. the outlook for the season is not as bad as it would seem, alihnuf«h only a few of last season ' s squad men are still in school. Wisconsin has a reputation of producing ball players the equal of those of other conference schools LIM L1.WIS, CxMKh ' llllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllilllllillllllllll Illlllllllllllllllllllll Pat ' 9 uiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;iiiiii:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii The 1 )17 ] iirsity Ihiscball Team OSMON C. Fox Cafilain Gordon 1, i: vis Coach John E. Farrwh Manager Pci sunricl OsMON ( ' . F i . (.iilchcr 1 liiRBtRi L. C;ram[ R. First Base Rowland E. Bri;nnan, Second Base E. Eber Simpson. Short Stop Chester E. Clkveland, Third Base William P. Snow. Left Field Rav C Edllr. Center Field C ' arl J. Langhofp, Rifjht Field Sydney T. Brown. Pitcher Samuel E. Ogle, Pitcher Robert A. Grashorn, Pitcher Edward 55(:hneider, Pitcher Edward Nelenschwander, Pitcher Utility Robert L. Baiw.er, C itcher Lawrence K. Carroll. Catcher John J McKeac.ue, First Base Cyril J. Beaver. Second Base Mac liley Irwin, Short Stop James R. Donovan, Third Base Orton Keyes. Left Field William Ross, Center Field Robert Si tton. Right f-ield K. ,iil of Sens April II — Wisconsin, 5; Whitewater Normal, 4. April 12 — Wisconsin, 9; Campion, 5 April 13— Wisconsin, lb; William and N ' ashti. 3 April 14 — Wisconsin, b; St. .Xmbrosc. 3 April lb — Wisconsin, b; Dubuque. 2 .April 17 — Wisconsin, 2, Notre Dame, 7 Fox (CJapt.) . Edicr . . . .Simpson Cramer . . . Sn jw l nphoff Sutnin Neuenschwande r Cleveland lirennan . O le Grashorn Brown i iruer Keyes Schneider Batting Averages 191 ; A ' vin ' Train nt: Tr ir C ames A. B H. Pet. 27 23 27 24 II) 8 9 7 370 348 333 292 29 12 8 3 27b in 250 4 1 250 25 2b 5 5 200 U12 11 1 Ib7 7 000 b 11 11 0(V) 000 1 11 000 1 000 .liiiiiuiiiiiiitiimiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiii INTRA-MURAL MINOR SPORTS INTLiR-C 1 ASS INTER FRATERNITY I iiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii f The Nelson Trophy l Nelson trophy lor intr;i-mur;il alhlttics was presented to the I nivcrsiiy by Re{ ent A P Nelson in LXcembcr. 1915. interest in inter-college contests was immediately increased by the beautiful award, the work of one of the country ' s leading sculptors, Leonard Crunello, and competition for the trophy started at once. The race for the trophy in its first year, 1915- 1910, was so close as to cause most intense interest. The Cx)llegc of .Agriculture won by the narrow margin of a half-point over the Cxillese of Letters and Science, and accordingly the trophy was placed in Agricultural Hall, where it remained until the following year, when the C-ollege of Letters and 5icience won it. The third race for its possession is now in progress, with several schools vicing for the honor. University coaches cooperated in designing a system of scoring for the trophy competition. Contests were divided into four classes. In C lass I, schools were awarded points in the order of their ranking as regards total number of men on varsity intercollegiate teams. C lass 11 represented the maior inter-college sports, the order of finish of the schools in the various tournaments being the basis of award of points. The minor sports, in Class 111, have a smaller Rhch.M -N P NtLsoN number of points awarded for the winning schtxils. and a still smaller number of points are gi en for the winners in Class l ' , where the competition depends largely upon individuals, instead ol teams. The Scoic-Hdard INTPAMUPAL ATHLETIC TOUPNAMENT FOR NELSON TROPHY. | SCORING TABLE CLASS ' EVENTS COLLEGE SCORES I ' lilo 17 J FIRST StCONO THIRD FOURTH FIFTH r, 1 INTEROOLLEGIATE TEAMS AuPir. lOMM ENl- R L  1 -V.V J 30 24 I 12 6 24 18 12 30 61 30 24 18 r BASEBALL 18 30 24 ' BASKETBALL 21 21 12 6 30 12 e J ,, FOOTBALL 30 18 1 2 . 24 6 ) ■ ROWING 30 24 1 TRACK INOOOB 30 ' 1 8 12 2 4 15 L 1 TRACK OUTDOOR 12 [ 18 24 30 r ' CROSSCOUNTRY 9 12 6 15 ' GYMNASTICS lOt 10 15 12 9 6 3 JU ' SOCCER SWIMMING ly WRESTLING J 18 9 9 _9_ ■ 5 4 3 2 1 f CANOEING 2 5 3 4 FENCING 5 4 .■ ] 1 HANDBALL 3 4 1 L ' TENNIS B 2 3V 5 COLLEGE TOTALS 182- 149 139 214 46 . uuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiMiiiiiMiiiitiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiMMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiirmiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiimiimiiiit- I ' a.r 200 llllllllMIIIIIIIIIIMIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIillllllllllllMIIMiriritilllllllMlllllllinilllllMlllllllllir The Medic Tool hull Tanii Intra-Miinil Cluinipions Officers C. R. Bardeen. M. D I lead Coach Win I AM Ml Coll. ' 18 Captain Elmer B. O ' Learv. ' 21 Manager I ' cr.sonriel William F. McColl, ' 18 — Quarterback George H. Irwin, 18— Left Tackle JAMts R Elliott. ' 20 — Right Halftvick Lawrence V. Lirric. ' 20 — Left Guard Peier W. Piper, ' l -!— Fullback Frank C. Florine ' 20— Tackle FR.ANKLIN R Williams, ' 21— Left Halfback ). Claire Harman. ' 20— Tackle John F. Gates, 18 — Center Willard A. Ciiipman, 19 — Guard Robert R. Roberts. ' 10— Right End Lyd P. Guttman. 18 — Guard Fr-Wcis R. Jan-ney. ' IS— Right Guard Ernest F. Freymiller. ' 19- Guard Edward T. Evans. ' 20— Ri ght Tackle .Allen S. Watson, ' 19- End Michael E McGarty, ' 20 — Left End Sigurd B. Gunderson. 18 — End John L. Ixkimis is -Halfback Stiniilirij .i Won College of .Medicine 3 College of Engineering 1 College of Law I School of Commerce .0 College of .Agriculture College ol Letters and Science Lost Pet. I 000 .500 .500 000 000 000 Bardccn Robcns Intin McColl Llt(ig Cullman Catn VkCorly ' Lcory Chipmaii Ev«fM JailiKv rrc millcr ' IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIMIIIMIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIMIIIIIII ' IIIIIIIIIMIIMirilllMiriMIIMirrilllllllMlllMlfllllllllllllllirr I ' if •0 ' Illltlllllltllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllillllll. The n)21 Football Team Sprirkmun Sli(.rnc Ri noLPii I I BiATii K Adrian I. Lamnu ks . Guy S Lowman Edwin S Sciirank Officers Captain . Manager . C oach As-it. Coach Personnel Piiii Ml n. Ri I D Phillips A. Irwin Ri DOLPii IH Blai iiR (Capt.) H. MuCarinky . Risii n. ToL ion Jamls B. Donaghky GiX)R(;i; C. BuN(;i-; . John B (jiappi.p. ' aldi;mar F. Brp.idsier Clari;nc;i; A. alkf.r Gordon O. Shornp.y Elliott W. Sparlin(. William B. (jnai.i Frank V. Gray (JiiiR .i-. I i. Burnsidl: . William 1 ( Mak iii:Tit: Franklin R Williams Frank Si i;i ii:l RoHliRI G. PolNDI XII-.R Wii.Loi I M Warrln I k ' HLRI L. Pi RRIN . Roland (; Sprinkman Lcli EnJ Left End l.cft Tackle [.eft Tackle Left Guard Left Guard C ' cntcr Cx-nter Right Guard Right (juard Right rackle Right Tackle Right End Right End Quarterback Quarterback Left Halfback Left I lalfback Right I lalfback Right I lalfKick Fullback Fullback Rentrii u Season 1 icvlimcn 0; Sophomores 22. The gaiiu Mas played November 17, at (-amp Randall Miiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiii i IIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIKIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIU The 1 )20 looihiill Team Officers James R. Elliott Georce Van Hacen Fred G. Carter . James R. Elliott A. Kendall Lavden Allen Spafford Raymond F. Knapsfein Dalwen Julian Frances W. Duncan Lester F. McCabe Clarence A. Ruff William Stemmler Edward F Evans LymAn E. Bu kin ;ham Kenneth Irvine J. Claire Harman . Howard B Stark Charles V. Sweeney George D. Theisi-n Raymond E. Donoiii f Edwin J Berc.man Captain Manager Coach Right I lalflxick Fullback Left tlallkick Left Halfbiick Quarterback Quarterbijck Center Center Right Ciuard Right Guard Left Cjuard Left Guard Right Tackle Left Tackle Right End Right End Lett End 1 ell End -illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilMMIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIItlllllllllltllllllllllllllllMMIIIIIIIillllllllUllllllllllllir Pa t 201 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiinitj Tl , -V.,.h ViK.loiMcs to ■ K ' ll i I ' K! EXTRA! EXTRA! ALL-FRAT PIG-SKIN TEAM IS PICKED BY S. G. A. Skyrockets Scoops Sporting World Wtth First Publication of Official Selection cr.il.f j1 and Cl cnin:nAtir.g A c rrrui study acd 1 of thr Inter- fraTcrn- OunUr?- and the p r ' I Of tv«r) ' tndividkiaJ partlol i-ant. S. C. A. bu com  forlh and pre- •pntPd SKTR0CKET9 with a cirbon copy cf Its ALL-STAB IN ' TrP.FRA- TEKNITY roOTUALL SEIXCTION. The T9!iB0Ttr for ih all-fr t«mjty it- l«t.on Ar« ' appended to th lln« up. Th;« prrat fport 5rcop was jrabtJtd ty t-ur a. ' fciivc who beat Walter £ckoiAoll to n by 13  cc«iid Our t.vro lJa h d m.Tdly from the firvcicapc vl Lathrop htkll with tb« dope Juit aa THE HEROES. e« (Alpha Gamma Rho) R.ght End loppert (OtH Phi epii- Right Tackle Edd.e PrtUUff Phi Oi I R ght Gu I At fto9 r« Oe)t) C«r Lr Roy Biirllntamv Ch, P I CAPT Left Gu J ' .mfn P«ter«on Kappa Sig) . . Red 2utf« AH « Muc 0:ck it Linde lS g R qht ' A. T. O.) Bullet Meade Mi A. E.i: ecb Br, Lf ' ft Hilf Back rf.t (Acic.a)... Pull Bach • t y Scott fPh. Ff«ti McKay S. ■ r (Ph. Ocll). ■od and h p!jiy na]y thai IbiR thalv-nr thf staff of th - Wirconsin i-it ar Macnttn ' to a mm id be pl - s -.n ' he hbT TV en N ovrm  r 31 yn- :h. ffni petitions, twr playfr- tho rc-Bi Hfrt) Rr  . the hnnd mne wine of iho Alpha Gammn Rho a-rrre. fratinn. was without a dtnitn the best -ntl on his tetttn He ' «as one of the few m«T. .n the FVa ' emtr Conference , thni was irnod en uirli to wear a cdm- r. ' ' -: - fooioin ••ji! ir. all of th came Tu.v.r. M.o r. i t uJflO fcerr. eK ' CletJ I  :.:a .-, or the M.iwaulree Sentinel Ail- Wt.ar team. 1« a fraternity brother vl I arwlty Coach Birhard!! Rojrrr par thli win u anca to tho Un ' btedly rive ffraater I I for his 1 akinfr lh I An for tafklc . Carl Hrtttpert ha 1 be+ ' n coach ! rjli fason bv Howard ' Hanrork at ZZO T-anedon street, and J.ime« peterwin. Cotifer nf chnmpicm tprinier. t- ui.iy outran ttw kleks of bis I pamers in « er conie he pla -ed. In . far bt ally h - trd ' beyond tli man be wa.9 n iri pi sed to tackle. This ren trick of Pc- ler ' on ' completely bafRed hl oppo- nents who thought It was a new Swed- diplomatic trick of tbe Kappa SIjfth iu.irt -r-b3ck by tiN admlrine S. For the half-back poitltlone Mucks Rulchlrvt the A, T O Mr; athlete. H first cbolc Hutchins wan Introduced to Coach Dobie he should be of STcat a5 ' l giant Coach Ha Lke on this account haa been elected aiwl tant captn; hi leammatM IMck T Unde. Ptl ' on tcnm He i the best open T S! ninner on the tmm and h ahould be ahlf to st«al arourd rljthl end for Joni; fcalnr Bullet Mendf Mr«rrin. whn wa« In- strumental in hrmt-lnc the Inler-JVa- fmltv champlon-hip to hl« fratemttv, without Question the b iit full-back picked jihortly ' aftcr eml food uard 1 but S. O A. fa -ored L0 Roy BurJln- ' I flrst cholcn. H« la al o «e- « captain of hit ( ' ' am. vlnct any I become the leadlnir poh- of hi: • mir.fr.iiv fitted for the If derahip tt n ' y tili-! tar team. Moopc PritrlafT. of (h. Phi GacLi, waa head and ehouldara . ' ibove any ru«rd In the conf nce He wa? the bent kicker verbal ' y on (he team and hn timely diaputes eaved many a pamr- for his team He (thould alao mak Uio aJI-aiar inter-Ilteran ' society teojn, as b« la PbUomatia ' a iilable rooT-h-ed n hanrtspmc l)lack « H o b- hoj.fd that hu Injury ' ke -p Mm from eompellnj: In ■unlver-ity hand-ball toumam rill Honorable Harry Scott rourh-neck; Fred McKav. ' the P team: and Bob Bn %r. the Phi belt Red Kf Xirr stirred the e5lt!on oT r i rflender without comp -TUlon and ih -ftm CAT) be aald of r ijtch fftark wMrt TTa.- elected water-boy by the S ' ThU tram challcnce nJI corner  n.| 0( r« not draw the culor line t •Plrned) S. G A. Poolball Cminltl S« nrent W.W. Raipj) «oou. The Season ' s Scores Phi (Xlt;i I hctii ( Alpha Van Onu-n., Signvi Chi 13. Phi Delta TheUi licta I ' hcui Pi 7. IXlliJ Tuu IXIta IX ' Ita Kappa lipsilon 6. IXlta lau IXlla I) Chi Pm i IXItii Kappa llp iIon i) Acacia 2}. C.hi F hi Acacia 0. Phi Si ma Kappu Kappa Sigma 7. Phi Sij;ma Kappa Alpha Gamma Rho o. Si ma Alpha i£psilt n ( Alpha Gamma Rho )?. IXlia Phi Rpsilon Phi Ciamma IXIta 0. Chi Phi uuiiiiiiiiiiiinininiiiiiiiiiiitiniiiiiitiiMiiiiiiiiitiiiii Ji ' i n iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:: .....uitiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiMiii;- 1 )17-1 cS Intra-Miiral Basket hull Eiiiliticcrs ( luittipiim v Personnel Willis M. Fanning., ' 21 Center Roy Schneider, ' 21 Forward Paul W. Romic. ' 20 Forward Merritt A. Giles, ' 21 Forward Cordon D. Shorney. ' 21 Guard E Edward Saberhacen, ' l ) Guard Millard M. Barlow, ' 21 . , Guard Walter H. Klapproth. ' 2 1 Guard Standings Won Lost Pet Engineers 3 IIXH) Commerce 3 I .750 Letters and Science 2 1 . t 7 Agrics . 2 2 500 Medics ...... I 3 250 l-flws ..04 fMH) .niiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiitiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinniiiitiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMi-; Pat ' 20f Ullllllllllllllltllllllllllllllllllllllll Intcr-lratcrnity Basketball Leafrue Delta I psiloti Clunupiony. I ' HS W rt- 1 mM Gratify I Records i)f the Seiisoti w Phi Delia Thaa t. Alpha SiRma Tau 5 Alpha Delta Phi 3 Gamma Tau lift a .2 Lambda Chi Alpha I Ihctu Xi I IXIta Tau Delta II Crouf III l hi CJamma Dtlla Delta UpMli.n . . Alpha Tau ( mL ' Ka SiKHia Alpha lipMloi Chi Pm . . Alpha Gamma Klvi IX ' lta I pMliin Phi Delta Ihcta Alpha SiKnlii Tau ' Kappa SiRma Pel ■ I IIIHI sn 5(10 4IIII 2(10 200 000 noo 400 ■l(MI 4(HI 000 Kappa SiHina Delta Phi IIpmIoh Phi Kappa SiRina Phi Kappa Psi Acacia . . . TnanBic . . . Delta Kappa l-psilo Ueta Ihcta Pi Phi SiRma Kappa Chi Phi Ihela IXIlaChi SiKma Chi Finals 1. i i I I 5IKI (J IKKI Ucsiilfs lit Final .SiuV Delta YpMl ' in . ... 20 Delta lIpMl.in . . , lt r ' hl Delta Ihela 2 Pill IX ' lta Ihela Alpha Siitma I au Alpha SiKitiii I au Pet. I 000 .8n .oOO .TOO ,000 .000 W 1. Pet 4 (I I U(HI (MM) (HK) ' Ka| |Ni SlKma helJ ImuiiIi plai.e  heii laiultv iiLti.in ruleJ ihi hence lhe plii xl no dual Kai HIMIllllllllllltllMIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIinillllllMIIIIIIII ll|||||IIIIIIIMIIIilllll lllllilMllllltllltllllMIIIIIMIIMIIMIIIIIMIlllMIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIiri TJiird . tinuiil hitrd-M iinil Indoor Truck Meet LiMnn i.Mu ' u . i A ii Ji SU. I- I.S The Scnrc- Hoard -0 to 3 a 1 3 X X if -o a s •5 ■D •5 a JO c 3 2 c 3 a: 1 i -0 3 I 1- a E 3 X EI I c 3 a; ■0 a 3 1 3 73 i ei c c c 3 a: 1 5 1 C c 2 5 L 1 1 n 39 L. lS ' (1 M (1 ; ; 5 3 35 Commerce . ' - 1 5 1 2 , 21 Agric-i... ' • ? ; -) 15 4f -yard Dash Shot Put . . . 40-yard High Hurdle 440-yard Dash One-lap Dash Mile Run Two-mile Run 45-yard Low Hiirdicv High Jump . 880-yard Run Pull-up ., Running Broad Jump Standing Broiid Jump Individual Winner School Winner Record Hsich. L. • S. L ■ S. ;04 4 5 Hcr:fcld. L. • S. L. • S. 34 ft.. ,!4 in Matchcttc. Com. Engineers :0t. 2 5 Edwards, Com. Commerce :58 2 5 Foumcss, Eng. Engineers : It. 4 5 Hohlfeld. L. l S. Engineers 5:50 Brothers. Ag. 11:22 Fourncss. Eng. Engineers ;0o Gill. L ■ S. L. • S. 5 ft.. 1 1 in. Kayscr, Com Engineers 2:12 3 5 Blodgett. .Ag. .Agrics 17 tirr.es Matchette. Com. L. S. 19.; . -J.... Ristccn, L. • S. L. S. .9 11 4 ; ;n llllllllllllll llllllllllllillHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII illi lilllilllllllllllllllllllltlll lliUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!IIIIIIlllllUIIIIIIIIIIIIII Fifth Annual Freshman-Sophomore Outdoor Track Meet Citnip RiifKUl. UaMvr '  . 1917 1921 (Fresiimpn). 74 1920 iSoi ' ihomokks), 56 The Score-Board  , r •f c  ■ R c Q •p 6 ij ■p o ■3 1 |ii 3 E 3 i 3 ? 1 - 4 i- ! i. n icC m SO X si 1921 4 J 4 9 9 8 4 9 9 4 3 4 4 74 1920 5 5 5 1 5 5 b 5 5 9 5(. 100- YARD Dash Mile Run 220-YARD Dash 120-YARD High Hurdles 440- YARD Dash Two-mile Run 220-YARD Low Hurdles 880- YARD RlN Pole Vault Discus Throw Running I In .11 J L ' MP Shot Put Running Broad Jump Hammer Throw Relay First Kargcr, ' 20 Taylor, 20 McCandlcss, ' 20 Matchcttc, ' 21 Pickard, ' 21 Pinkcrton. ' 21 Fourncss. ' 30 Pickard, ' 21 Pauly. ' 21 Larson. ' 20 (iill. 20 Larson, ' 20 Larson, ' 20 Anderson, ' 20 Won hv 1030 Second White. 21 Smith, 21 White, ' 21 Reed. ' 21 I illv. ' 21 I lohllcld. ' 31 Sh(X-makcr. . Kayscr, ' 21 Marsh. ' 31 White, ' 21 Reed, ' 21 While. ' 21 Marsh, ' 21 Larson, ' 20 Third Shoemaker, ' 2 I No third Reps, 21 Shoemaker, ' 21 Kayser, ' 21 Peterson. ' 31 Phillips. ' 21 GolT, ' 21 Matchette, ' 21 McC-iirtney, ' 2 1 Ldwards, ' 20 McCartney, ' 21 Shoemaker, 2 1 Nash, ' 20 Record :10 3-5 5:15 :26 :lo 3-5 :55 4-5 1 1 :20 3-5 :30 4-5 2:16 f) ft , o in OS ft.. I in. 5 ft., 5 in. 34 It , 1 in. 17 ft.. 9 4 in 81 ft L. HIIIMIltlltllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMIIIMIIlllllllllllllllllllllltllllllHIIirillllllllllllllillllllllllllllllilllllllllllllli ' -•Illllllllllllll iIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIL: lirst Annual Iiitcr-Frcitcrnity Indoor 7 ruck Meet CAnina.vmm A uum, March 2. hilS The Score-Board .a a- fj b 3 7 E I ■3 i r 3 ■ •? a ? c 3 1 c i 1 E i I ■2 6 1 1 1 C C i a: c. 3 c 1 1 5 . 6 1 c 1 2 7 n n 4 o 1 4 3« ? 4 n ,_ 3J Chi Pm 5 4 n 4 1 J ' J 1) 7 4 3 1 ; i IN, Lpsilon 3!i II 7 2K s 5 1 28 Sterna (.-hi 5 1 1 n 5 2 n lOJ ' i 1) 1 II 7 ■ 1 5 H II II lOH lnhii iau timcga « 4 n J I) 1 n n ■t n UK 1 au Kappa Epsilon n 4 II (1 II II n cacia II (1 5 1 II II II II 1 5 17 3K 1 LX-liu I ' psilon H 1 n I) U 7 7 7 ' , UctaThctaPi 1) 1 2 1 (1 II 1 2, ' -; 7, ' i Kappa Sigma II II (1 1 1 II 1 5 Tnnnsli- 1) 4 n 2 II II (1 II (1 II 2 ' -i I ' h, s ,,,., K.inpa 4 Fifji Matchettc Foumcss Sigma Chi Brothers Sigma Nu Second McCandless Sigma Nu McCandlcss Sigma Nu Phillips Sigma Nu Smith Phi Sigma Kappa ■40 ur,i ; (a.i(i Third Foiirlh FiHjrncss Sickcrt Sigma Chi Phi Kappa Sigma 4S-Yard I ou HurdU-s Tuchcmann Littig Kappa Sigma Delta U 40-Yard Ht(h Hurdles Littig Fl bcck Delta U rriangk One-lap Dash SpafTord Sickcrt Chi Pbi Phi Kappa Sigma Gocrlit: Beta Schmidt Kappa Sigma 440-Yard Dash Fi lh ' Beta ' Gausewitz Sigma Ch Cocrlitz Beta Fijbeck Triangle Scott Ch. Psi Halj-mde Run Brown Psi U Mde Run Jones Sigma Nu Standing Broad Jumr Record 04 4 5 Knilan l Phi Kappa Sigma iygh C5ii I ' I itchctte PjtU Cncen PhlPii Williami Sigma Nu Phi K S«B. Stgma Nu-Oii P« Pott Vauti McCjirthv Sigma Nu Sho Put Mueller Blatter A T O. Beta Bayonet Contest Ja JnhnMm f ' hi Kappa Stgma Delta U. Relay Sigma Chi McCandlcss Sigma Nu Ray Phi Kappa Sigma La den I Phi Kappa Sigma Kappa Stgma Hilt i Jumf Matthews Mutchettc ) Pm U Psi U Pouly Sigma Chi Littig D U Shape A T. O. Orr Signia Chi iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiii: Pof 209 !irii!i:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiMillilllillllllilinilililliiliniii:iiiiiiiiiiiii|iiiiiiillllllllllllilllllllltlllllliii- Annudl Iiitcr-C( lU e (h-( ss-(U uiit Run C.Ri ' Mr. (C-Ci. Fir ' .i Smiiii. (CXj, Fourth Mom I ILDT, iLSi. Sccund (a li.kn. (CX ) Fifth PiNKiRioN. Fi. 1 hird Tunc of inner lb mimilc;. }0 scconils C ommi;rc:i-. Fir- t EnjiinttTs, Third L. fik ' S , 5M.cond AKric- . Fourth PtT.sii inc7 of innini: Team GiwiX)N . Crimp l i: Ni:rii A. Ca li.i:n f Ri ni kk k R. Fru.m k A IIlhiri Fill; 1 )(in W Smiiii Annual liitcr-CUass ( ro.ss-CJoiintry Run Ihnc mile course, (kloher 2i . 1 17 Day ION. 1 1. First OiMi-. Fl Fourth GoLDKN. 18. Second ODonnkll, F). Fifth Elsom. 10. Third Time of inner: lb minutes. .vconih Points Juniors, first 24 Sophomores, second 54 Seniors, third 55 Freshmen, fourth 78 Personnel of innini; I cam Gordon W Crimp W ili ard 1-. Oai ion Bi rnarho W . Ei.so.m Frank R (VDonni :il ii i i m J Pi kari II ii: F ' 2i iR (K ii: i 1 .■ ' s- iU  I ' M f hlui ( rijicn Kiiv cr I lolillcU Kicd Hl.illcr Cr.. .!!! AnJcr-.n Sinilh P..nJ Sttrnlicb U )thcr Mutthiuc I ' lnkcrn.n Shocmiikcr I ' mily Rcppv l ' rric Ml iiiMiriiiiiMiiiiiMMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiniiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiKiiiir; I ' iif no illlllllllllUllllllMlllllilllllllllllll ' : Intru-Miiral Baseball, 9 7 i. ' rit, ' i i ' i ' r.v. ( ' ■Iniinpu t s Royal L. Meyer . Edward Silbernagel Officers Captain Manager Personnel Walter A. Emanuel Catcher William R. Reuter Pitcher Earl ' . Olson First Base Roy E. Melvin Second Base Royal L, Meyer Third EJasc Fred C. Nichols Short Stop Kenneth B. Cram Right Field Fred A. Rankl Center Field Neil Saunders Left Field Lenno a. Stelling Center Field Harold L. Christensen Right Field Stantlinii of Teams College of Engineering . College of Medicine College of Agriculture School of Commerce College of Letters and Science College of Law Won 2 Lost Pet. .667 .667 .500 .500 .000 000 The 1920 Baseball Team Officers Allen Davey .... Captain A. Hubert Fee. Donald W. Reynolo.s .... Marvjgers Arthur Couture . . . . Coach Personnel Allen C. Davey Catcher Berjholo C. Mann- Pitcher Earl V Olson . . First l sc Royal L Meyer Second Base Frederic A. Horton -Second Base Jacob H Doxtater ITiird liax Roy E. Melvin . . .... Third Base Alvam C Elliott .... Shortstop F. Russell Wall .... Right Field Iarvis D. Davenport Center Field N. M. Saunders Left Field Tllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllinilllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllll: l I ' at ' ill iiiiiiiiin luiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliii riw 1 ) 1 S Wirsity S iinimiii r Ic ' dni Officers Hi.NRV L. Bii;ksa( II HaKKV I I. I llNDMAN Caplain Coai:h Personnel KennIlIH E. Bami- -40and 22()-yar J l ' )a-hc ' and Relay C. Edwin Bach — Relay Li;nn(i. C. Hali-)i:man— 4(1 and l(H)-yard l )a -hcs and Relay Paul P. Rldy —40 and 10()-yard Dashes and Relay Hknkv L. BiiusAdi— 200-yard Breast Stroke and l5()-yard Back Strokt Will lAM Sii:mmii:r -200-yard Breast Stroke and l5()-y.ird Back Stroke John W K x;ii -l-ancv DivinK RouiKi 1. SviiAV.sKY -Plunninn Pkim I y n 1 loi Ml s— Plunulnj; litoul . Siiisiiii Wisconsin. 44. Milwaukee Y. M. C A. 27 Wisconsin 41 . ( ihicaKo. 24 Third in ( onlerencc SwimminK Meet . MIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIMilMllilllllllllllllllllllllMlllllillHIMIIIIIIIItlllMilllllllllllllllllllllMIIIIMMIIIIIIIIIIII- !tllllllllllllllimi||||MllllllllllllllimilllllMlllllllltllllllllllllllllllL: Ei rhr Aiuiiml (Conference Swinunin r Meet LiamUm. III.. March 22. I ' -HS The Score- Hoard E ? 2 ffl 5 E to 1 c 5 ' i s ■2 in 1 1 E 1 1 (2 North t- ' i ' Chicai;. WlSCOn-ir, 2 S 2 Illirv i-. n 1 :. . 1, n , - ■ FrrnI FlMI Stcond Third Fmirlh Record 40-yiird Swim . . . Earic (C) Rics (C) Bahe (W) Grove (N) :19 4 S 200-yard Breast Stroke Bieruch (W) Sicmmlcr ( V) Bacon (N) Miller (C) 2:45- 220-yard Sw.m . . . Earle (C) Simon5on (N) Gnwe (N) Wchcr (N) 2:31 3 5- Fancy DivinR . . . McDonald (N) Cray (III) Koch (W) White (C) fKrumm (N) 299.55 points Plunge for DiscarKC Sinxmson (N) Po« (N) Holmes (W) (Carlson (C) iMcUin (Ind) :J9 150-yard Back Stralce . Raymond (N) Bicrsach (W) Rics(a Patterson (N) 2;()2 100-yard S«im . . . Earic (Q Grove (N) George (N) Rics (C) :59« 440-yard Swim . . . Simonwn (N) Grove (N) Branowcr (N) No fourth 5:41 4 45 leO-yard Relay . . . WiKonMn Bahe Buch HolJimun Rudy Chicaffo Northwest em No fourth 1 :2i ' 3 ,5 ' New Conference Record. DMIIIIMIIIMIIIIIIi. IMIIIIIIIMIItllllllli ' tfTIMirilllltll DllltlMMIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Wisconsin-Milwaukee Y. M. C. A. Dual Swimmiuf Meet Mduauk.. y. M C. . ., MarJi 9, I9IS Wisconsin, 44. Milwaukee Y. M. C A , 27 The S core- Board 1 OO c 4- M in X CO X CO C ji: D a Q 2: T3 T) -3 0 6 c 3 c o O s a. a: H 6 5 5 4 44 Y. M. C. A 3 4 4 ■- i 1 4 27 Event First Secor d Third Record 40-yard Dash . . . Bahc (W) Lucdcrs (Y) Haldeman (W) ■22 200-yard Breast Stroke Biersach (W) Scnn (Y) Brunharl (Y) 2:53 200-yard Dash . . . Bennett (W) Thompscn (Y) Clause (Y) 2:25 2 5 Plunge for Distance Rcinecking (Y) Svitavsky (W) Holmes (W) :54 lOO-yard Back Stroke . Biersach (W) licutcmcisler (Y) Stemmler (W) 1:21 2 5 100-yard Dash . . . Iknnetl (W) Rudy (W) Lucdcrs (Y) 1 :02 2 5 Diving . . Koch (W) Scnn (Y) Zarsc (Y) ItiO-yard Relay . . . Wisconsin (Bach, Rudy, rialdemiin, and Bennett) 1 28 1 5 .illlllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIItlllllMIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIi ' Pail 114 uiiiiiitiin llllllinilllllli UIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllltllllllllllllL: Dual Switntuing Meet, Wisconsin vs. Chicago Madison. i ts , March 16, 1916 Wisconsin, 43 ; Chicago. 24 The Score-Board E ■0 « c e if 160-yard Relay CQ E i to . c c s a 1 6 E to Wisconsin ! 4 ,. 4 43 Chicapo 3 1 ' - 24 £ivn« First Second Third Record 40-yard Swim Bahe (W) Rudy (W) White (C) :22 Fancy Di ing Koch (W) White (C) No third 160-yard Relay . . . Wisconsin (Bahe Rudy. Holdcman, Bach) 1:27 200-yard Breast Stroke Bicrsach (W) Stemmlcr (W) Miller (C) 2:45 4 5 ' 220-yard Swim . Earle (C) Stemmler (W) Abt (C) 2:51 2 5 Plunge for DistarKc Carlson (C) Holmes (W) Svitavsky (W) 36 1 5 150-yard Back Stroke . Bicrsach (W) Ries (C) Holmes (W) 2:04 1 5 100-yard Swim . Earle (C) Rudy (W) Holdcman (W) 59 3,5 ' New Conference Record. nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll llliiiitM:! llllllllltllllllllllllllllllllMIIIMMIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIn iii ' iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiMiiiiiitiiiiniiiniiiiiiiiiHiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiMiiMiiii. llw 1 ) 17-1 (S Varsity (wytn Team Suinuucr «xi«ard Dcm.nu CVShcii McCmnis I ' . Officers Donald W. McGinnis JOSIIPH {; SlIINAlFR Captain Coach Personnel DoNAU) W . . 1( C,iv.Nis— Rintiv Parallel Bars, Horirontal Bar. and Horse King C Woooward — Rinns and rumbllnf; Oiif) P DiKOiiRicn— lumbling. Parallel Bars, 1 lorizontal Bar, and Horse EvRRKTi C Edwards — Parallel Bars and Rin(;s M ViNLiiNT 0 ' Sn£-.A — Rinss. Parallel Bars, and I iimhiins I. oris Ok. ki-.i.man —Rings. Parallel Bars 1 lorinontal Bar, and I uniWinu Howard H. Baki-r — TumblinK Cji I NN B Warri-.n — Horizontal Bar Hi.RHiRr CiiAi nil — Horse Parallel Bars I loHAR ill Ki I i:ii N — Horse Kcconl of Scoson IX-(eated F-reshman Cjvm squad twice intercollegiate .ind conlerence meei- cancelled illllliltMUIIIIlllllllllMIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIUIIIIIinilUlllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllMIMllli iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiitiiiiuiimiiiiiiiiii ' :: Third Anmiul Intru-Mural Gynuuistic Meet L ' nmrsily G ' vnmaviiim, A urc i H , I ' IS Gymnasltci Won by Letters and Science, I 5 points Engineers, second, 12 points Agrics, third, J points Commerce, fourth, 6 points Varsity— Diedcrich. L. S , first; OShca, EnR , second; Edwards, Com , third Freshman— Postal, L S. first; Martin, Ag , second; Taschc. L. S . third; Meyers, L l S . fourth; Melaas, Com . fifth Won by 22 points Commerce Engineers Agrics, third. 1 1 points Letters and Science, fourth, 8 points 125 pound— Thompson, Com. n5 pound— Cuttman. Med. 145 [ und— Spcttlc. Eng. 155 pound— Mulrooney. Ag. Ii ' i pound— r-ulvr. G)m. 175 pound— Hanson. Eng 185 pound — Faber. Oim. Boxing Won by Letters and Science. 7 points Commerce, second. 5 points Lightweight— Duncan. Cjim . fir t ; Keelcy. L S. second; Schapiro. L S. third l- ):! GYM lE.VVI ' ranklin f lamntond ' oss Mcver KIci.-icn Katc R.Jid Letter tovlor Postal F- ' cdderinn Elder Taschc llnlcnmbc l- ' airfield Smith Enck oo Bailey IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIII MMiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiKiiiiiiMiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiii Varsity Hockey Team Officers J. C. Strinaler Coach Leonard Moran . . Captain and Manager Pvrsiinnvl Donald Dohr Center Phillip Warner Right Wing Edwin Baer Arnold Pribnow Left Wing Leonard Moran Rover Hubert Fee Cover Point Saml ' el Cusson 1 _ f, r, : Point Carl Peterson J Adolpii Teckemeyer Goal Record of Season Wisconsin. 2. C.ul cr . lilitiiry .Xc idcmy. 2 . ' t Culver, Indiana Wisconsin, 5; Illinois Athletic C lub. 9 .At Chicago Illinois iiiiMiilllMiniHiniMIIMIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII I ' atr : iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir: iiiiniiniMiiKi iiiiiiMMitiiMiiiniiniuinininiiiiiiiM ' - Secoiid Annual Ice Curnival QiMrttrMtte B ickuxlfJ kMhi C ESTER RiECK. firM CEoftctv Martin. ! ccorKl J HN Otto, third Ski R t GUVNAR GUNDCFSEN. first Andrew Hawkins. sccotkI Alf Gltsidersen. third Mtxtxl DotiW« Hazel Kejvt. Otto Ureoi. firM Helen McCarthy. George Swan, ccorni Eleanor Gaik. L L. Iltis. third l-fhmary 22. .V Holf-nuU {M n) Cllli-STER RiECK, first A Louis Carlson, second Henry Griswold, third Fancy Skating George Martin, first Ralph Blopcett. second Clarence Flkjina. third One MtU Relay {Cottege AcRics. first Engineers, secornl CofcfMERCE. third M,Ultt fn {Men) Cmentlk Rii-ck. first William Sti-acmler. second A Louis Carlson, third Quarler-mtU BacAitord (Ladies) Marie Wilc xson. first Margaret Swift, si-cond Eleanor Gaik, third Inter- sorority Relay Won by Gamn a Phi Beta by default Evangeline Maher Julia Hanks Julia Goetse Helen McCarthy Hockey Game CoMMLRl.L, 4. .■ (.R1(. , 2 Comni r« Atrics Leonard Moran Robert Stanbury Donald Dohr Earl Cowie Hl ni-JtT Fee I ' niL Warner Adolph Teckemeyer Hamilton Oxik Carl Peterson Lester McC ' abe Howard Grace Benjamin Stranahan Samuel Cusson Milton Walls nllllMllllinMIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIilMlllimillllinilllllllllllllMllillillllllllllllllltilltlllllllMllltllllllllllllllMllllllllllllllllllllllllli- Mill MuiiiniinriiiiiMiiiiMiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiMiiHiniiMiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiMiiMtiiiiiMiliniiiiiiii: tor- Fra tern ity Bon ' liti 1.:kIi ri- ' lcItT C.ildcrmastcr Phclpi Murks Stmiilitiils Won lost Pet. Alpha Sigma Phi 4 ' o H,S2 Sij-ma Alpha Eipsilon 4(| || 7x4 Psi L psilon 3,s 13 7,vi4 Alpha I ' au Omcfja . ' 3! 20 W)7 Chi Phi :il 22 5o8 Kappa Sigma 27 21 5o2 Phi Sigma Kappa 2,S 23 540 Bcia Thcta Pi 25 23 52(1 Sigma Nu 25 2o A M) Delta Tau Delta 25 2o A ' -X) Ihcta IXIta f;hi 23 25 4; ' - ' C hiPsi 23 2S 450 I i ta Psi 21 30 411 Phi Kappa Sigma |0 2 ' 3 ' )5 tiamma lau [k-ta IS 33 352 Phi Psi 17 34 333 Alpha IX-lta Phi 15 5ii 2 14 •Phi Delta Ihcta 51 (KMI •Phi Delta I liclu (..rfcitcJ all u.iiia-. Hi f)r .v High Individual average C iot f red- in I r4 32 5| I ligh Average- (or Three Ciames (ulhertvon i  )7 Migh Single (iame Spengler 254 I ligh Single I earn I lame Sigma Alpha Mpsilon 15.S High I eam Total for I hree Games Alpha SigmuPhi 2t. h ' ■iniiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitHiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiitiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiuiiiiinir: I ' af 120 J . illllllMllllllllllllllllllltlllllinillMIIIIMIIIIIIIIi llltlllllllllllllMIIIMIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIt ' ■DIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIII uiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinin iiMiiiiiiiiitinuiiiiiiiiiitiiiii n ' o;; .7i v Athletic Associutioti PURPC ' Sl-: Ihc purr- antiinR women hv fiX-iicrinR i Dcfvirtmcni of Physical Edui at the head of each sport h  ihi W- ' Mu-n-. ihlvin.- AvMtiiition in the promotion o| n hi h rhystcal cfTiciency itere t in Kymnastic and athletic activities The ns-iociution cooperates with the in manaKinft the vonous sports of the ye s with the faculty head of the sport There is a student, u W A. A. girl. MELVIBERSHIP —Membership is limited by athletic accomplishment, one semesters altendancc m school, and hv 11 seventy-seven weifthted averafic. One hundred and twenty-five points is the athletic accomplishment required lor admittarKe. plus continued participation in some form of athletics arvJ attendance at the bi-wcekly meetmBs for continued membership At present, the association has over one hundred members HONORS — Honors arc awarded on a point system. For three hundred points, a member is awarded an a socia- on pin, for six hundred points she receives a small emblem, and for eight hundred points the ofTicial W on a white i eatcr is awarded. ACTIVITIES — The main work of the Association this year has been the revision of the constitution and the abolishment of material awards Many additions to the constitution were necessitated by the great growth of the AsstKiation. manifested in the continual increase in interest and membership. L ' nder the new rule regarding material awards, a giil. upon earning the required numl- er of points for an honor, is given the right to purchase the insignias thereby alleviating a financial scram upon the AsstKiation. besides strengthening the ideal of Athletics for Athletic Sake On June 5. 17. the Association instituted its first annual Field Day at Camp Randall — the program in- cluding the usual track events, interpretive dancing, an archery pageant, and championship gamcsof tennis and baseball. OUTING CLUB — The Outing Club is a new. informal club organized on the basis of any sport Membership open to anyone interested in its work It has a section in the new constitution. W A .- CONFERENCE —A conference of Women ' s Athletic Associations of the Middle Western states was iristituted by quest ionr at res sent out by the Wisconsin W. A. A. The conference was held at the University of Wis- consin, on March 9- 10, 1917. Official representatives attended from twenty schools. Sixty-one delegates arnJ two hundred persons ' were prc v f ! !■- .-c.-n-l . ..ni ' f ' it . ulni Vi h;is been nationally organized, was held April 12-13 . I 18, in Chicago nniMiniiniiiiiiitiniiiiiniiiiiiiiiMiiinniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiitiiinniiiiiiiiiiniHiiiiiMMiti Pagt 22} iiMiiiiiiiiiiniiiuiiMiiiiiriiiiiii iiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinitiiiiniMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiit: Final Emblem Wearers 1917 Helen Am i ini: Bark MvRA I£mi RV Katherim. WiiiiNEV iiiiriiMMMiiuiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiriniiiiiMiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiMiiiiiiiiliiiHiiliMliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiintMiiin l ' „,t 224 LiiililMllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllinilMllllllllllillllllllllllillllllllllllMlllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllluiiiilllllllllllllllllllllUlllt:: 66 99 w: C-XTHERINE ClLVER. 18 Margaret Alice Fr. ser. 18 Gertrude Haessler, 18 Helen Haessler. ' 18 Clara Lolise F. Ki;i ' ki:, 18 Florence Harriet Kin(., l ) LuTiE Marie Nelson, 18 Gladys Evelyn Palmer, 18 Dorothy Rirtbrock, 18 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiii illlllMllillinillllllllllllllllih. iMllllllllUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIMIIIIIIIIIil W,A. A. Board Kepke t ' I 1 lainillun Cooky Damkochlcr Hjcrmslad Howell Hacsslcr Stcommc Elsie M. IIowfll . Phyllis B. Hamilton Emma L. Damkoehler Marie E. Hjermstad Ll ' tie M. Nelson . Clara B. Williams Clara L. F Kepke Gertrude Haessler Ray Cooley Gladys M Wise . Ruth Stromme Helen H. Skinner Magdalen Cronin RiAH B, Facjan Mary S. Glover President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Track Basketball Hockey Indoor Basehalt Outdoor Basehalt Swimming Archery Bowling Conference Secretary Post Graduate Refiresentativc Outing C ' luh President ■lilllllllllllllllllllllllllllll aMIMMIIHIIIIIIIIIIHIinMIIIMMMMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMMtniltllli iiiiniiuiiiitiiitmiiuiiiiiiiii Hockey Varsity Team Mari Buuaian ' 18 Emma Davkoehler ' l8(C:apt Gladys Felix) , ' ! ) Ada Bemson Mari Bollman Katiierine Blrtne s RaOiel Chadwick Gladys Fellows Elizabeth Mead Florence Kinjg (Capt ) CiMRLorre Baer ConstLiA Cress ,(Cjpi ) CjO tSl. ti.o Bi R wt VIaRCI ERITt f o FRANCEA I UUhR Marjorif Mai I. NovtmhcT 7 Seniors Sophomores November 8 Juniors . Fie hmcn Phyllis Hamilton. 20 Florence Kin .. I )MARaA HiNKiNs. ' 21 Lutie Nelson. ' 18 Clara Kepke. ' 18 Viola Pleuss, I9 Catherine Ci l er Clara Kepke Emma Damkoehler (Capt ) Alma Llessen Lutie Nelson Inceboro Rldd Viola Pleujs Mary Rolse Llll ' Saul Margaret Schlltz l 20 Ri ' Tii E Johnson Lalra Kremfrs GliRTRUDE NoETZI L MaRJORIE SCI ' DDIR l 2l Jeannette Sattre Catherine Malrer Irene Opcenorth Jean Patterson VIargaret Peterson Phyllis Hamilton Mary Johnm n Amy Jouse Mari.aret McMeans Marua Hinkins Hilda VfAni.EY M Marie McKitpick Elizaiieth Sammis KflLDRED SoiWARTZHLRi. Mildred Sweet Margaret Swiet Dorothy Reitdrock EsTELLE Sawyer Clara Williams Helen Skinni Mabel Thwa Ll ' cy Walirii LoLISE WtlD Marie Wilcoxi . Lillian Wintiji F ' loreno. Taylor Helen Thompson Irene Tim:mi 50n (Capt ) s!rK mc.i November Novemhcr 1 1 Seniors 2 Juniors . November M Sophonrores 2 Freshmen I niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiin Mil iiiiiiiiiiiiiiililiillllllllllllllllllllllllllMIII IIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIU Indoor Baseball C;ik: Schultc Jnhns-,n Wise l-VII,n v Varsity Team SchrocJi- 1.CW, ILmma l )AMKor:iii-r;R. IH (il.ADVS ll I.I IIWS 1 ) Hfi.i.n W fiss, 20 EtHII l l ' MMI k. If MaRI.ARKT SclRI.Tl- 10 Irkne Thompson. 71 Eli:aBI III KlNHALI. IH PlIVlLlS Hamii-ton. 20 Gracf: Glferup. ' 21 Ada Benson liviMA I AMKOFIII.IR (Uipt Lorna Mi ' RPiiv Ray C;(X)i.r;Y Mary Glovkr DOROIHY RfIVBRiX.K Ma(;dai-i:n Ckonin Jill A Johnson Madfi.yn Stan IIFIKLI) Ethix Dl!Mmf.b Iu.i:abi;iii Ki-.ndai i Xi-bfria Tiii-S CoRNi-:i.iA Cki:ss lARt;ARi:i Johnson F.LINOR S( IIROFDFR ANNIiTI a l lNKi F. Lii.iiAN Lr;wis Maroaii 1 S .Hi.ii.rF Gi-Ains Fixi.ows. (.a Pt CjI RTRi ' Di-; Noi;t:i:i. Soiinia Sinaiko li ' LiA () )i;i:i 1 1 M Ri in Gladys Wisi: ( IIARLOI II BaIK I ' llVLLIS Hamilion. c;upi. Hfi in Wi iss Mary Fowi.t r lu.l.l-.N TliNNIiV Fsilll R ANNI R Ei.IjVNor Gaik Marii-; Vm.c;o. on IRA |N( HI 1 1 Hlildah C}|-.RIJ.S Lois Wukrim;!. I )2I MaR(.arfi Wai.nfh 1 )i I.I n Aoams GracI-: PlilNAM RllTII McCxFI.I AND AlK K FlIZC.IHI ' .ON OoRO MlY KroIM- Rl ' lll Skiii.i R Amanda Hanwin CiRAC 1- Cill-.l-Rlii- Maki.i iRiH Shi I ' ARD f ' .l NMAN(.l KiNNi: PaII INI Pahm Garlics IrI Nl lllOMI ' -SON. ( iipl Scnii rv .... Ik Junior . 17 -Sophomores F l-rcshmcn hrcshncn 5 F ' reshmen 8 )unl lr .Sophomores ' ) S)phomores 17 Siiph rTKirt F-rcshmcn l ' Junir)rs I ) Scniiirs Seniors lo Juniors , . 8 Sophomores F- rcshmcn . 21 F ' reshmen Chamfiioruhifi uvn by 1 1 ' ' iilllllHIIIIIIIMIIIillllMllllllii iillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll ' ' IIIMIMHIIIIIMIIIIIIIIHMIIIIIIIIIT •IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIKIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIill; lllllllMMIIIIIillllllllllllllllK Basketball ' .V — (. ' lUfn ' ,. 1 Palme ri.s.r C:nrcv Miirolin r Chadwick RuuJchush Kcpkc l.ucvsnn Varsity Team Irma Marohn Floren ;e Kin -. Rachkl Chadwick Mariov C ' orey Llk.y Wai.i.rich Mary Roldebi ' w h Rachel C;h, dwk;k Marion Corey Mar(.abft Fraser Cl7 R; Kepke Alma Llesson Ik i Marohn 9 9 INURED BaRTHOLF KaTHERINE B )I-I. Florence King Lilly Moe EijZABErii Hf o IfZO LlIc;iLE C HASE I jrothy Haessler Amy Jobse Beairice Koehn Maroaret McMeans 1921 MARr.t ' ERITE :Rr SKY FraM ES IXsfMEH Helen Sackett MlLORED 5if:HWARr:Hl ' R(. Mariia Minkin.s Leila Sinaiko Carries April 4. I ' lIH— Junior i4 Freshmen Seniors 4(1 Sophomore- April lb. IQI8 — Seniors . . . 5li Freshmen Juniors 17 Stiphomorc April lO. |0|8— Seniors 27 Juniors Freshmen . . 32 Sophomore Ca.ARA KecKE Clara Williams Eli:abetii Heao Gladys Palmi;r Mary Roidebush C i.ara Williams )ean Pa I ii:rson NIarcaret Peterson Li ' Y W ' allrich MaRJORIE licUDDER Florence W ' eckesser Louise Weld Mildred Sweet Marcarei Swiet I IeLEN rilOMPSON Chamtyion.fhif} uvn by 1918 TilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllHIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIillillllllllllllllllllllllir. ■Iinillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllll: .iiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiimmiiiiiiiimiiiiil: Archery 1911 l ' 2n Catherine Ritchil (Cjiri Marv JnnNsroM. ((.apt ) Lois McDcjnai.o Ritii I ' riian Ruth Stromme Gri TaiEN iini 1 1 r Hi I IN OiiK Cup in individual lournamcnt awarded lo L .l McDonald fur hiuh -tore- of 81 ItllllllllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIItllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIlu I ' at ' 2)0 IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIT jiiiiiiiiiiiinniHiniiiniiMiiiuiiiiiHiiiiiininiMniiin::! uiiiiinniiUMniiiiiiiiiiiuiiui Tennis l9lS Chamf} McKcc Bovnton ' arsit Team W INIPRED UeNT. 17 Margaret CiiAiiiHiLL. ' 20 ( :atherine Culver, 18 Emma Damkoehler, 18 i ttr C ' ladys Ausm n- Helen Barr Winifred Bent Lois Clark I ' Ielen Yoonker (Cdpt I9IS EXmoTHY Beecher Rlith Boynton (Capt ) Catherine Culver tMMA DaMKOEHI ER iNt.RID NeuSON I Ielen Brown I.ORETTA CONKLIN (Cjlpt } ( ENEVIhVE CToK.M (.AtHERINE loRSI K 1920 [ moTHY BARHhR PtIRClMl Bt ' RRILI MaRi ARET CRAir.HILL tCjipt ) RUTHjimNEOT Mi.i.EN Snyder I. I |ft— IJ points Champ«.n. : I ' IZO— U ptxnu 3 |0m — 11 points 4 I I7— hptiim Tiiiiniiiiiiiii iiiiMMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiitiiniiiiinMiiiMiMiMiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiMiniiMiiii Pu4r :il iiiir OIIIMIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Baseball ;«;, ChamtMons ChaJvMck Ucnson Torhcs Smylic C. x)Uv Glovir Howell Williams Kcpkc Murphy Thus iirsity Teiitu Katherink Boll, ' 19 Phyllis 1 Iamilion, ' 20 Graci- Pkebles, 17 Rachel CHADWfcK. 18 Cxara Kepke, ' 18 I Iklen Skinner, 19 Ethel Dummer, 18 Clara Williams, 18 Isabel McLav, ' 20 1917 Adelaide Adams Helen Gath Mary McNii.iv llicLEN Boll Gerirlide Haessler Hrm :l Mygram Edith Bond Helen Haessler Lol ise Patterson Mar(.l ' erite Dams Lol ise Jillson CiRA e Peebles (Capt.) 9 A ' •Ada Benson Mary Glover 1 irothy Reitbrock Rachel CiiADWKK Elsie Howell Hannah Smiley Edith Bond C lara Kepke .Alberta Titls Ethel Dlmmer Lorna Mirphy Gear a Williams (( pi.) 9 9 W imeri D Bariholi- Isabel Loin-: i i ma Reid Kaiherine Boll (Capt.) Caiherine; Mal ' rer Llll ' Saul Marie Hjermsiad Mar ,aret Peierson Sonni Sinaiko Florence Kint. . lice Portereield Helen Skinner 1920 Elizabeth Candee Doroihy Hais.sler Isabel NULay (Cjipt.) Helen Carlson Piiyi i is Hamilion (Cliipt I Crisiine Skolas Cornelia Cress Laira Kremi rs Marc.arii Wac.ner Eleanor Cjaik (jirisiina M( Lay Loi isi-: Weld May 23— Freshmen 20 May 28 -juniors . . 14 Seniors 7 Fn-shmcn . H May 24— Juniors 14 May 29— Sophomores 20 Seniors 7 Freshmen . Id May 25 —.Sophomores II June 5 — Seniors o Seniors 7 Siphomores . 2 Championship won hy i ' lS ■MiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiliiliiiiilliiiilltllllliiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiillllllllllllliliiiiiiMiilillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllliin IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMMMIIilllllllllllllllllllllllllimilillllllli iillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMIIIMIIIIIIIIli Irack Marjorie Chappel, ' 20 Mary Fowler. ' 20 Julia Johnson, 18 LuTiE Nelson, 18 17 MvRA Emery BeRNICE FlTZCilBBON Alma Ll ' essen Jeannette Lamb Betty Nystrom lOLA Plel ' ss Marjorie Chappel Marcaret Childs Mary Fowler EsTHF.R Grai: Kaiharini; Wiimnky Track Teams Katharine Whitney (Capt.) Inez Noll Julia Johnson (Capt.) LuTiE Nelson Inc.eborc; RiiDD 1919 LicY Wallrich (Capt.) Adelaide Paine Margaret St;HULT2 Gladys Wise 1920 Marjorie Scudder (Capt.) Am y Jobse I ESSIE McGi;. rH Mar -aret Smiih Ruth Turner FiWc , if . Junf . 1 )20 — Champions 1918— Second 1 517— Third (Om f-ourth Track Records h lurl Ball Record Mar I Rk.hter. lb bJ ft. i in iiult Mary Fowler. ' 20-4 ft lOJ, n Bavkctball Throw Kaii WiiitNEY. 17 -bOft ?sin. Hop, Skip. Jurnp NIarion Clan y. 18 25 ft. in. I liuh lump M HV f-owLER. ' 20 -4 ft 4 ' j in. Runnins Broad Jump Myra Emery! 17 H ft 1 in. -niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiliiiiiiiriiiillllMlilliir iiniiiiiiiiiiliiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiKiiiiiiiiiliiliMlliilliii lutcr-Sorority Bowliuii; Championship won by l i ' i ' i imia liii i Second Place — Alpha Phi Third Place — Ali ' Ha Xi [ (Xta HiRh lndi idual Score — He:! in Browni;. Kappa Aiphi I hcta 20(1 High Average — Helrn Bbowni Kappa Alpha Theta 1 211 1 ligh Pin Fall— Kappa Ai imia 1 in ia 211,357 Championship Team Hixi-N Skinm:k, (Uiptain RiiH Strommi- I |[-:i.i;n Browni- Mar i ha Sa .i: C.oRA Malt: Oaphnf C ' .ono i:r Fl.oRI N( I Sll Hl;( KIR Officers of League Marion (!lan(.y. Kappa Kappa (jamma Mariiia HiAl.v. Pi lieta Phi . DoRoiHY Sfciri. Delta Delta Delta 1 III LN Skinnir, Kappa Alpha Theta PrcstJcnl Vue-Prcs.tda t Si-cn ' tary Trt ' axiircr rt fN m4I ik iMIIIIIIIMIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIilillllMIIIIIIMIIIIIIMIIIIIMIIi Jlliiiilililiiillilillltllllllllllliiii; .IIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIMIIMIIHIIItlllllllllll ' - Boii ' litifi filH— Cham f ions Roberts Bmwn Dickers, in Mary Ukdws. If RkbaHaneb. 18 McKcc Scott Hancr I ' ursirv Team Kuhns vcraac 116 117 HovruJ MARr.ARFi HirrroN. ' I 115 C:oraMaut2. W. 148 Helen Skinner, in 117 Madel G Smith. 20 114 E oulinu Teams fin iir l ' 20 It2l Maky Bn.ms i. Zll-ltlA BOHAS 1 NICE DnNKl.t Sada BUCKMASTER Dn«..ri(Y DltKKKV.N Laiira I ' avilli Grace Hathaway Adei E FaI.K No«« I k.vm 1, Mildred Kra:ier CuiNoiR Heliieri. Heii n Gill Rn i Kiiivs Mari.aret Hutton Louise Inc.ai.is [£mma Mueller MAJicARer RoiHiHr 1 Ieien Skinner Ruth A Johnm n IIeli N Roth DnHOTIIY S X TT Sara Sieven% Mannie Par.sley Mm i «KD Skinni.r RtKAlUsLH ' ; MvRl.AREt Mei AA s Maiiei G Smith i Uip 1 Harf ILI Wai iim r ' .HA Mauti l( -upt ) Standings .«u; Sir, Currw TiHirn.imrni in Kj |0| — 570 |i 20— 5121 1021—501.7 hrtmp«m hip  i fi by l l|8 niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiMtiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir HIIIIHIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIMIltlllllllllllllllHnilMlllllllllllinillllll illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllU nt iiiiiiiiiMiriiiiiitiMiiMiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 1 he 1 ress •iiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiii! ' iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiu i The 1919 BadfTcr 1 5 Harrv I I StoTl EJilor-in-Chir — — Charli-: I I C:ari ksti-.k Business Manager S = Board of Editors 5 = Alhlelus 5 3 I Iaroi.u a Gill S Fraurniturs S ri.oYo t SuLi-ivAN Edaor S P rti-;r 1 1 BR m N Edward Bri-:i-:n: Z Womrn ' s Editor 2 I- ' t.ORIiNCE KlN(; S INK Hi-t liAK rnoM- D J i-:an Patterson Marie E Hjermstad S -ArfmtnMlrolton S Mar ari:tJ 1.1-wis — MaRI.ABI I I. MllAAS Editor E I bi-:nt Ai i;xandi-:r Hei.iin L ' I ' l ' rner I-Yovd f- Hewett SI Photofirophs Stanley D. C) ' Shea — Mildred V ' Pl ' cki-:t t S = Satire = — Kenneth I. S :r.n . Editor = Sarah E Ashiiv Assistant Editor Z t EORi.E n Anindses William E Dhii-s = I ' iorenceI ni:AKiN CJERTRiiDi-: Harrison (.jladys Fellows ■ Honor Holt ™ Irene W. Haley — Edward I. Delss . . Editor S — Whitney N SEYMt UR — PhotOKrat liy — Marli s I. Haviik Paul I Craneeieid Bahon I ) Mi vi b = — CiLM N l Y Mt IniYRE RAIMirNDB WlWIlTIIR C E I.HY A Waiibiui ' . :Jil. ' = = CaIHIHINI II 1)1 K Al INI i: EllES ImoRINCE i; COIIINS — E ,s «,u •Vu(i f« E Z Marjiimh Kinnan M Ei.irAMi th I ri ' i it S S The .Stage S = lllc.MAS W TUITLE = — Editorial Assistants Z — Ihkmas I-: Umiiiin .ham Ci ahi nli V JiiI ' Rndi Ri ' Tll E Joiinwin = E I.IN.OInA (.h.AHIIIR.. loMIIll, UlNNETT EsUIIrJ WaSMR = = A(i il..fv E 3 AiiinM Sikhii-r 5 Art — — M.-ni I TN Sl S JII 11 ID Editor — E I li 1 1 N A lii ' NisEk I.AWHiNii A Iti AIR Kenneth 1 1 I ari i y :: — K..M I. Hahn IaiihS Iariin Cora A Maui: = X (iRAO A (.lEI ' JIIIf l WotliYll SiH ' Rtllll Roy { (.ollHEI V N — ClINNAK ( ' (■I ' NIHKMN MaURINeE VaIN.IIN AllllY H I III OISON — 1 li Rill Ri S I. en: = IMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIMIMIII MIIIIIIIIMIIItlllllllllllllltllllllMlllllliniir ■■ ■ • tlllllllllllllllllllllllir •atif 2 111 lllllllllllllinillllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMlllllllllllllllllllllllllliHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIItlllllllllllllllllli 9 ' ' f ' fl Vi(M v r i-iM n Gill Wallrich Tultk- Burtholf Mcwttt Puckcll Kinnan Dcuy i a Uu, 11 aof te Brown Harrison Dcakin Mautz Jocntdt Fellow Meyer Nnundv niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilllllllllllilliiillilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiililiiillllillf: llllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllMtllllllMIIIIIIIIIIII ■- y I n m ij if C A P fftfl! ? ,| f • «l| A iJi:M. %fA rlin N..rth I MARt;ui-;RiTi-: Udwakl ■tKT E cdJc CrisvMilJ li .•nl ck Mu 7 ic lliisincss Staff . ,w.i(,.n( . i,-rIi..i.iv u-ui o if limmeis A u.... l- (:RA l 1 11 1 L. Gkaci-: Bray Saoa Blkxmam 1 .h KaTIII-RINI ' . i- ' hlMIV MARjimii ' ; l-istiijt I..,inI .aimh Mil i..sl,i.i-, ..i Kahii IIorios I-VAN..I1.NI Mai Jl an | ,.l AOILCK Aixii.ni I i-.t:Ki-Mi.Yi H l-.Illl 1 VlNJU lil N WlMlsl.lNKV ■ ' i ff(xn Lif ii j itin Af.n irf f Kl ' SM-.ll Smu.i.v litiMnrSi .A.iti.wunrj Aiiiiv U I II miN l.l..LNi. Mai Ml K I.I ' IMOWI N.WIM 1M.UN1 iVSlll A l ( 111 Sii.inirRii llll.lNIA llNIH milM IIUIIIIIIHIIIIIIMIMIIIIMIIIIII IIMIIMIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIt I ' atf 2 411 ::i||||MlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMiiiiiliilllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllirii iiilMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIILl WISCONSIN OVER THE TOP UMIIFUPIOMSSISIIMU '  1 1 HJ? ' - ' -I iND KicHis s;i m ' • ■■ ■ ' ' • « - Gkorge Earl Managing Edit The Daily Cardinal News Stajf George Earl Wallis Edward L. Deuss . Owen L. Scott Oscar C Dahlman Lincoln Qlarberc John B Chapple Leonard Erickson . Lowell J . Racat: Kentmeth Scott Bertram G. Zilmer. Florence Lamper Bernard E. Meyer Constance Burnham. Helen Collins, Dor Managing Editor University Editor Associate University Editor Assistant University Editor . Athletic Editor Assistant Athletic Editors . . Desk Editor Skyrockets Editor Special Features Forensics IS Br.RCER Refwrters Kditoriiil Staff LeroyJ. Bl ' rlingame Ray Eri.andson litisincss Staff John C. Miller Robert T. Herz T.-H. Powers. H. M. ICmin. W . D. G. B. Hodc.ins. Helene Bowersox, Esther Van Wagoner Herbert M. Baker ... Arthur R. Upgren William H. Snider William Gullickson Erwin Hentien Elizabeth Hooper. Delia Prouijfi liiismess Manager Advertising Manager Connor, J R Associate Advertising Managers Winifred Inc.lis, Advertising Assistants Assistant in Charge of Accounts Circulation Manager Assistant Circulation Manager Collections Manager Bookkeeper r . Assistants TlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllillllllllillllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllMlllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllMlllllllllllllllllllli; lUMMIMIMIIIIIIIIIHMMHMUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIi llllllllllllllllllllllllllllltll IIIIIIIIIIIIIIU NoKMA -Siai ' ii-i;r l£Jilor Ai II I ' Pouii Riiii n Assistant EJitor t licpiii icrs W IMI Kl-.l) liAKIIIol.l MaKJOKII I Ii MlRIl k Mavis Cm HH Makv , I owi ii !■! I1K1N( I C in.MNS I.DUIM I.IDIAM I 1 iiKI N( l; l ' )l AKIN I.OI.S M(:l )l)NAI n I ' MVLi IS I Iamimon Ac.ni-s Sari. IS I I iiRA 1 ll ISI lillllX ViNJI- lIUItlllllllMIHIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIMnillllHHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIilllHIIIIIIIIIItlll IIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMK; iJIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUlllllHIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIHIIIHIHMimillllHIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIMMIIIIIIIMIIIIII Carditiiil Board of Control Rt ' TH Stoltk .... Reynold C. Grosser Susan B. Ramsay . Frj nk T. Tucker .... PrcuJenl Vice-President Secretary Joseph R F.arrincton nlllllllllllllltlllllllllllt IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllMIIIHMtMHIIIIIIIIIi r rUHIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIII IIIIMIIIIIIIIIi; Tl.N,wPi«t, : A Crib,., TV. 1 -J .1 .k, Cl.r The Wisconsin Literary Ma raziue . n Exchange oj Ideas Erni SI 1. Ml vi.R PniLii- A Adli R AcNKS DURRIE EsTHiiR Forbes Editorial Board lanaging Editor, First Semester lana):ing Editor. Sccor d Semester Associate Editors AVC.ISI j Fl;ilRKNBA( I LvMAN Bi;i;man John S. Linen NlARiomr: KiNNAN lUisiiicss Staff Helen Knowlion Bl-RiUA OCHSNER Adverltsin Manager Associate Advertising Alanager Assistant Adverltsing .Manager John S. King Circulation Manager Harold Bryant ... Accountant liiisiriess Assistants Elsa BARwir; MiLORED Evans .Mary S C larke Elizabeth Priei i Pi 11 ( .1 S SlMI ' SliN AJliT ( chrcnKith Simpvin Mcyc I ' rucu Krviwliiin l-incn Ktnnun Mtiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii; uiiiiiiiii I. ...., iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin I ' atr 144 JiiiliiilllllliiiniiiMiiiiiiiniiiiiiniiniMHiniiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii: SZOVNTKY r AGAZlNE The Country Magazine More than a ' college fx ' t ' er tn that tli lieUI is heyonJ ihe tci ii t)Ui more than a farm fiaf e that It may enter into rural matters at a point where the arm paper must leave off. Editorial Staff Ralph Naf:ii.f.r Editor-in-Chief Deane G. Davis Associate Mae Schernecker . Associate Sidney P Smith Short Course Assistant Searcent p. Wild . Associate Editor Orlando Horlamls . Associate Recina Feeney .... .Associate I Iarry D Gray Short Course. A --sistant Business Staff Ro3iN Hooj Business Manager W. Platt Hayes . . Asst. Business Manager John C. Warner . Asst. Business Manager Tracy R. Shane . Circulation Manager Samuel Lepkov ' sky Asst. Circulation Manager J. Arlington Anderson . . Associate Duncan C. Reid Associate Simon Luban Associate Ray .X Xei.son . . Short Course .Assistant I Ml. ■•. )ai. S. I illlJIIIMIIIIillllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllHiniMIIIIIIIIIIMIIMMIIIMIIII Ifi Pat ' 24 f lllltlllllllllllHIIIIIIillllllllMllltlilhllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIII ' IlllllllllillllllllllllllllllllU CThc CUisconsin JEiiAinccr The Wisconsin Eni ineer ' The official monlhly fnihlualion of the College of Afechanic.s and Engineering Editorial Sniff — RoBF.RT B. White . . ... Managing Editor, First Semester 1 W. LTRR E. Blownf.Y Managing Editor, Second Semester = Walier S ath, n Loyal S. Baker 1 Glenn B. Warren Willlwi E. Erickson E Edmlni-) M. Wise James W. Johnson j Business Staff 1 William J. C.AMi.iN . Business Manager 1 Ray E. Beiirens . l in R. Klann = F. L Klsheck Roland .V. Rai.ai: = Caryl C ( ' larki; [■)onalo ' . Slaker 1 IfiKird nf Diri ' itors 1 Pkoie.ssor C. I. C;oKi ' Priiii,! ! or L. F. ' an Hacan E Proii;ssor J. G. Callan Proeessor R. C. Disqde E Proeessor M c: Bi I he Proee.ssor 1 G 1 ). Mack 1 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiii ' iilllllMllllllli? Pait 246 iillllilllllllimillllllllllllllllli ' :: 9i I Cotwnicrcfc BRAIN IIM Buy INEZ ' k S.,n .. ' IC.....,.R.JI..U The Commerce Ma azine Brains uith Business — Pu - ia ih hx ih,- . mmcr,c .S ii, cvi(,v of llw University : ilttiinistnilitc Stuff Editor-in-Chief Associate Editor Student Editor Ex-Ofjicio Faculty Editor-in-Chief Business Manager Faculty Adi ' isors Professor William A. Scon Proiessor Edward H. Gardner Professor Stephen W. Gilman Professor Hugo Kuechenmeister Professor Fayette H. Elwell Edwin A. VIoffatt FrjVNK V. Birch Marvin S. King Professor Edward H. Gardner Erwin G. Sachse . Walter E. Malzahn Walter L. Maier Earle F. Drow R. G Smilev Irma Langdon C. E. Klumb I Willard V. Erdmann Btisiness Staff Advertising Manager slant Advertising Manager Advertising Assistants Circulation Manager nlliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii natt 24 7 iilllllllllr; iiiiriiiiiMiiiiiiiliiin!i!iiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiinrM ' ! ' !iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiitt!!:!Miiiiiiitiiii!.: Mi{iiirM4iuHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiniiititiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiniiiiMiitiiiiiiiiii((iiiiir; k .  1 lie Olage . iMniiiiiiiiiiiiinii! iilllllllllllllllllllllli: iilliilltiiiiiii- Uaresfoot Ikwill MtCoy Klann 1 y.ill 13uich K..uur S ichM- Scolt McM. m Lmdscy MtPhitrm 1 Iib ic I ' air lII Rud Kay m.ium Motoncy . )c!ricc lliH: l Davis EJwatdi KawlinB- Ciill-rcalh H Officern ilnian 1 IcniMPK Pcachcy SVDNOR GiLBRKAlH Paul P Rldy Presidents William j. Hay Vice-President Armond Schiller Secretar James A. Peachey Treasurer M Ctrl I ' d s John G Blount (. ' ., K[ W. Maedie Traton H. Davis William McCoy Donald Edwards John W. McPherrin James Farrell David W. Moore Sydnor Gilbreatii Elton K. Morice Carl O Harris John R. VIoroney William J. Hay James A. Peachey James F. Hemsinc C. Harold Ray Floyd F. Hewiit Charles A. Rawlinc.s ' . Bradley Higbie WlLLIAV R. ReL ' TER II. Chester Hoesly Pal L P Rudy WiLI lAM K HoWISON Erwin G. Sachse C l ( IL II. 1 loLMAN Armand Schiller Ai.vix R Klann Pail , . Semrop Iames M. I.indsey Rk hard I 1. IVRELL 1 W luilLE niiMiiiiiiiiitMniiMiiMiiiiiii !iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-; tUMniiniiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiMiniiiiiiiiiiiiintitiniinniiiiiMiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiitr iniMiiiintiiiiiiitiiMiiiiP. ' F-Acrv l.aJv ii IVrfcct (icntlc Hares foot Follies of 1917 I . r.v I loll. SoturJoy ! cmh.-r S. 1 17 William Dlecji . Mrs. R. F. SEvm itT Gen rat Oit Danctna Dii F ' lamSimugh Sword Dance The Latest Novelty fr m linjtlund Harcsfotn Four in Selected SuRRs in Harmony Carl Maedjc and Those Cuie Broilers in ' Nix On That Love Stuff for Willie The Two Loose Nuts from the Flivver ol Hcmsing and Ray in Canwuflaitc E Haresfooc Jazz Orchestra Ragflinft Zazry Jaz: from Jazz land Paul Rudy and I -red Bickel with girls and hoys in Whenever I Think .( Vou G David Moore and Soldier Girls in When the Ladies Go to War H Football Four Kelly. Garpcntcr. 5 cott, Jacobi ' I Could L nc You for ' iour Money ' I David X-loore and Girls prcsentinti I ' m in Love with Every Girl ' J Finale Ramcscs lllllMIIMUnilMMnMlllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllllU IIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIinilllMllllllllll Miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiini lllllMlllllllllllllllllli:; Edwin Booth f « i If Dci r S Officers First Scmi ' sttT J. Gkorc.e Crownhart PrcuJinl I£llis a. Stockdvkf. K ' icc-PresUlent ( LARIiNCK F. S ;nL)BrRr Harold M Fif.ld Raymond C. I loi comhi: Second Sfmcslcr Alfred M. Rocfrs Arthur N. Wilcox Secretary Raymond E. Holcomb Treasurer .... Roblrt M Brewer Keef er cl the Mask | Gforc.f Crownhari Members Charles Edwin Bach Frederick McIntyre Bickel Robert Miller Brewer Eugene H. Byrne Jesse George Crownhari Horace Kleffler Dean Joseph Byron Deming Everett Carlyle Edwards Leonard Frederick Erk:kson Harold Mansel F-ii i d Herman Kenni mi lUmi i Earl .-Xlhert Hf.assler Raymond Edw ard Holcombe Gerald Bl ' R(;h Hod .ins Stanley Rlssell McCandless Edward Lee Perkins .Alfred Moore Rogers Clarence K. F. Schltiert Thomas LeRoy Siiepard Ellis . dolph Siokdyk (jirai D IXm ' m Sione i Mil l( No U I ILCO. Annual Opouhia. Mccliiijl — hmiKiry It. 1918 ITic Cjlitlcrinji Gulc ivj )i nvan.v The Rising of ihc Ml ion . I.ady liretory The I ' nsfcn Host .... Percival Wilde M. W ' w iiniiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilllliiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir Pate if 2 IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIl Red Domino Dawson McCarthy Mrs. Scybolt Dennett urstvct Chubb Bollman Humiston Frai Smith Bucll Ochsner Fleming Officers Mari H. Bollman President Marjorif. Kinnan Vice-President Hilda L. Kieckhoefer Secretary Bessie Margaret Buell Treasurer Mavis A. Chubb Dorr irw Mvrtihcrs Emma Gretchen Corstvet Mari AH Louise Dawson DoRornY Dickson Dennet Ethel Sturcess Dummer Janet Durrie Catherine L. Fleming Margaret A. Eraser Beatrice H. Humiston Mary F. Little Margaret Mary McCarthy Eva Marie Mitchell Bertha Ochsner Mrs. R. F. Seyboldt Dorothy P. Smith Mahi.aki I S Till iiiM u Annual Open Meetinii--Dvccmher 15. 1917 What Sunken Meadow Saw ' Joint Owners in Spain The Turtle Dove Beri MA Ochsner Alice Brown Margaret Scott Oliver iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii .)iiniiuiiiiiii iitiiMii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii)iiiniiiiiiiiii)uiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiitiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii :: Tii ' clftli i}j ht — Red Domino — luiwiti Booth Joint I ' ldilm lioti FulU-r O cra I lou.w, May 4. 191 S r OR IIHE BENEFIT OF IME RED CROSS I I HE PIERROT OF THE MINLTE By Ernexl Dowson Pierrot LtoNA Hickman Moon Lady Adeline Briogs II THE TURTLE DO E By Margaret Scott Oliver Gong Bearer DoRoniv Smith Chorus Mari Boi.lman Kwcniin Marc;ari;i Eraser The Mandarin Beatrice Humiston C hang Sut Yen Mavis Chubb Property Man Hilda Kieckhoefer God of Fate Margaret McCarthy 111 THE LNSEEN I lOST liy Percival Wild Visitor (Clarence Schubert Surgeon F ' red Bickel Orderly Ray Holcombe IV PLAYGOERS By Arthur VC ing Pinero The Master I.eRov Shepherd The Mistress Dorothy Denneft The Cook Marion Dawson The Kitchen Maid Dilma Donald The Parlour Maid Janei Dlrrii: The Useful Maid Margaret Lathrop The House Maid Ardes Mozinc.o ' llie Odd Man Leonard Erikson V DANCE inh:rlude Dawn Adeline Briggs Assisted by Ethel LXimmer. Greim Schuli:, Mar(.aret F-raser, Frances Tucker. Julia I Iarrin(.ton Solo Julia Hanks Fuun and Satyr Dance liiRi ha 0 iisner and Mavis Chubb Shadow Dunce Bi riha Oc iisner ' nilllllllllUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII: Patf iS i:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiMiiiiiiiiiiiii .iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ' Twelfth i :lit P v ' I Vi VH III m W jckman Bufch Pierce MozinRo Lathrop Loughlin Schultr Harkcr Smith Braunfcldc Donald McMurr - Whiteside Colby Officers Acnes Louchlin President Myra Harker Vice-President Imogene Burch Secretary Helen Smith Treasurer Delma Donald Mistress of Wardrobe Honorary Mcrtihers Gertrude Johnson liLiZAUiiM P. Hunt Ariel McNaughton Active Meitihers Adeline Sumner Bricgs Marjorie McMl ' rry Margaret Braunfeldt Maude Miller Imogene Burch Mary Ardis Mozinco Helen Maude Colby Cordelia Clement Pierce Delma Ellen Donald Helen Ramsey Aline Elizabeth Elles Margaret Charlotte S :hult2 Myr Slsan Harker Helen Belle Smiih Leona Hickman • Charline Mari Wackman Margaret Lathrop Madelon Charity Wiliaian Acnes Celestine Lolc.iii.is Kaiiierine Page Whiteside Annual Open Meetirie — March 9, 1918 Twig of Thome ... . . Marie Josephine V arren The Pierrot of the Minute ... Ernest DowsoN -iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Pa,t ISf ' iiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiriiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiMniiiiiiiiiiiiiii- Futlcr Opera lloii.sc, January 26. 191S The Winninii Acts First Prize — Twclllh Night Dramatic Society A Medley of laics. Agnes Loughlin Characters - The Mis ' es Donald. Harkcr, Burch, Robinson. Sprague, ( lark, Lough- lin. Barrett. W ' ackman, Lathrop. McMurry. Picicc. Smith. Colby, Schultz, Whiteside. Ellcs. Second Prize — Edwin Bo(jth Dramatic Society T ie L ' nscen Host. Percival Wilde Characters — Clarence Schubert, Fred Bickel, R. Holcombe rinrd Prize l-ima Beans. Alfred Kremborg C haracters - .Marjorie Kinnan. Beatrice Humision, ). Bloom (Jemral ( oiiuiiiffecs Jamks Richardson Business Manager S ' DNOK GiLURKATH Union Business Advisor William Baldkrston Assistant Business Manager Randall Gould. Louis Mann Publicity Lawrenck Hall. Ernesi Wallau Program and Floor Frank BiR(.ii. Clarence Joi-RNDT .... Advertising Prrxlitcriari Staff C!e(.il Holman . Production Manager SYDNf R GiLHREAili ssistanl PrOiliiction Manager BlLl.lE Bii;.s .ll Musical Director William K. Howiso.si Stage Director Rk HARD IvuRi L Assistant Stage Manager Edward MoRM. Properly Manager .Al.viN Ki.ANN Electrician l-Ri I) R. Erdacii Assistant Electrician . Drips, J. King, J. CoNNELL . Property Assistants iMIIHIMinillllllllllMllllllllllllllillllllllllltlilillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIil Pat€ ISt Ulllllllllllllll illllllllllllllllHMIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIK nilllllllllllllllli: illlllllltllli; lllllllllllllllllllllll! !iiiMiiiiMiiiiiriiiiiiiliiilliiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiliiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiii(iiiiiiliiiiliiilillilllMllliuiiiillllllllilliiiii: Buiity Pulls the Stritif s ' The Junior Play I ' uIUt 1 hcalr.-. Apnt 20. I ' ) IS M.J I Room in Bunty ' s home, Sunday morning Aci II [Jcforc the Kirk; same day Act III Scene the same as in Act I : lollowins day Cast of Chiirticteri Bunty Mavis Chubb Weelum Kinneth L. Scott Tammas Akthi ' r N Wilcox Ellen Marie E. Mitchell Teenie Bi-;rth Ochsner Rab Earl A. Hf.assler Susie Catherine L Fleming Jecms I Iarolo M Field The Beetle . I i Rov I ' Shepherd Edward 1- Perkins Herbert M. Baker Earl A. Heassler Robert A. Herz Le Roy T Shepherd Ellis A Stokdyk Edward L Deliss William K. Howison Thomas W Tlittle Miss G. E. Johnson, Mrs Production Stajf Committee ' Chairman General .Manager Production .Manager .Xdierlt. ing .Manager •Stage .Manager .• i,vi.s(an( Slage .Manager Pi Wici v .Manager Properly Ma.Uer , ,s,si,s(on Profierty .Master R F Siypolt Directors IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIT Paf 2f !tllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllttlllllltlllllllllllllllll|IIIIIIIIIIU Wisconsin Glee ami Mandoiin Clubs Mu-t.it lutlU MvK.i XJ.iiiT- Hrittinuh.nii ILisinplliiK Hr..«ti H.ilxxKk Hayden bimpson Buchholt2 blakcr Davis Shepherd Desebrock Loomis Holtz Conn Crownhart Hcasslcr Moroney Kircher Giles MengelberR Davies Lanndon Spcckard McCray Lyccll Richardson Hewctt Fetter Clarke Professor E. B Chamberlain Director Floyd F Hewett President I AMES M, RiaiARDSOS ' .... Manager Glee Club Carl J Lvcell Leader Irvint. I Ml ' skat Accompanist First Tenors William J Babcock James J- Hayden Earl A Heassler Russell A Conn Edward L Perkins Second Termors Theodrick W.Bradford Rl ' ssell M Fetter Harold I, Holtz Ernest J Brown I Leroy Hasenpfluc. Sim I ' McCray i-LOYD I- . Hewett liantones Edward E. Adams t Ie.s-ry W Desebr x k C)Ordon Shepherd Reuben S T. Brown John R M «oni y Thomas W Tuttle liasses Deane C Davis Ralph S McKav Don V. Slaker Paul E. Kircher Geori.e D Riillii-s Leland W. Specxard Ale. ander L- Simpson Mandolin Club .Arthur O F Buchholt: ; , j . ••ir.il , (ln.WiM. iMoMv.sl: Urittincham Franklin C Davii.s Kay I- Kii jms4.man Caiwou. C Clarke Merriil .A Gilei George W. Martin .SVtomy Mandolins EowiN S Bice Fred M Holmes William G. Mantonya Harold O. Frobao Paul E I Ioppe Ronald C. Mattox Harlow 1 LiKihiis Banjo Maruioia Sleet Cttitar RioiardH Eoe vilieL Radke Byron C Lam. don Guitar Fh ae Pouter H Brown Don V. Slaker -ItlllMIIIIIIIIIUIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII lilllllllllllllMlh ilMMIIIIIinillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIillllMlllillllllllllll IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Girls ' Glee Club r.llotson tdw rJ. W.ppcnn n Slcvcns llx.,na.-, Ur, . (.Ic.rup Du.Mvwn I ..l.kcmcr N.chols M Ncprud V x d Dennett Dutch Sc«on Braninc Marttn Lampctt b. Ncptud M.Miller Mat«hall L Miller Chichester Na.h Bre« ' Mer Nulter R.ch Sm.lh Basfctt l-ailin RiOiKan C.rddard Officers Hazel Branine , • ' ' . ' i ' ' ' Ruth C. Smith tce-President losEPHiNii Darrin • Lihranan Fi ORENCE Lampekt Assistant Librarian Professor C. H. Mills Director I ' lrst .Sopranos Vfrs; Adams Grace Godimrd Genevieve Rodigan losEPHiM- [XxRRiN Helen Haisi-r Lena Rowenhorst TRosi; [:ii.rc:h Dorothy Martin Agni-s Skelton Dorothy Denneit Florence Nash Klth t.. Ml H Faith Fari in Esther Neprud Margaret Stevens Marion Flemin., Laurette Nichols Hildei arde W ipperman Niiumnia Pasley Second Softranos Ha:il liRANiNE Alice Lloyd-Jones Mildred Stewart Ann [iRK-t S Fl-tlRENCE LaMPERT HeLENE iHOMAS GrI.K IIIN i:)UNASVAY JaNE MARSHALL AbBY B. TiLL.TrSON Irene FoL.KEMER Dt-.R.riiiY W t Mi First Altos DOROHIY BASSE! 1 GrA. E Cil.EERl ' P MaRJ.IRIE - ' •. 1 ' MiiDRiuGiiiuiE-siEK Leila Miller Lli:abeih Weimar Jean Rich Second Altos Anna Braun Mar .l ' erite Fdwards Mark n Nepri ' d Marion Brewster Mary Fleminc; I i ■ i ' him Vo, Mai ' de Miller Hiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiimiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiuitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Pat ' ' n,e Plalf. orm jiiiiniMiiiiMllllilUllMIIIIIIIII Mlillllliillllilllllli; illllllMtllllllllllllllllllll IIIMMIi:: W Wearers Josppii Barn[ s Bi:a II Nathaniel Paul Biari Leroy James Burlingame Ray Samoro [irlandson Harold Martin Cjrones Alfred Paul I Iaake Frank Delmar Higson John Clement Warner Seakgent Peaboov Wiij) fX INCH I he sprinR of 101 1, when Mrs. illii.ni I- . ilas. to cncour;iKt dcKitinn ut Wis- K conMn, inuuKuratcd the practice of (jiving six old fobs annually, first in order to seniors, then luniors and Mjphomores. the forensic W has been treasured by intercolleniate men as a token of distinction in reward for excellence in intercollegiate debating What the athletic is to our athletics, the forensic W is to our debjilers, — the hiuhest avvard for [vrsistent hard work, not with muscle, hut uith brain • IIIIMtMIIIIIIIINIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllilllllllllllllllln: I ' atf 2r 2 MimiiiiiimiiiMiiiiii iiiiMiiiiiimMimiMMmiiimmiiiimiMiimi niiiiiiMiii imiminiimiimami.miimnmiu Forensic Board Officers Leroy James BiRLiNGAME .... President Ovid Bermiart Bli.x Secretary Mahi.on- Humphrey Caradine Treasurer ATHEXAE Philip Fox La Follette hesperia 0 ID Bernhart Bli.x PHILOMATH! A Lerov James Burlincame AGRICULTURAL LIT Pall .A.xel Clarence Eke SENIORS- A r-LARCE Mahlon Humphrey Caradine Milton Nfoscs JU. inR., T-LARCE Glenn Bl rton Warren ■ V Fou-triF M. llllllllimillllimillllllllllllllMlimill IIIIMIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIMIHI IIIIMIMIIIIIIIIIIMMIIMIIIIIIIIillllllllllllllllllllllMin Paf 2ti HIIIIUMIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIItnin tI!IIIIIIII!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!IIIMIIIIIIIItllllllllltllltlllllllllllllllM!)lllllll!inili:i - lili ' K ' f ' h Ml i i IS f. ■■■■ ' ■ ri, ' I i! i 3hm t tlriuitf inn ! L- I u ATHENAE vs. HESPERIA The I- ' orty-vcvcnih Annual Contot . i .sic- Hall. Friday. January I ft. I9IS Question Resolved, that strikes and lockouts be declared unlawful, during the continuance of the war, in government establishments and in establishments manufacturing the bulk of their prcxlucts under direct gdvcmmcnt contract. Negative Joseph Barnes Beach Philip Fo.x La Follette Milton Moses. C ' loscr b. • lllllllllMIIIMIIIIIIIinillllllllllUlltlMIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIMIIilllMllllinillllllllllllllMMIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIItlllllllMlllllllllli- Pat ' 2t ' 4 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ' . rrrnr i ' hi Ui. T -H Ikilnt Diiiatr , iiii; Ai- s. iii:spi:ria Chainnaii of tlw Etctiirii; Professor John R. Commons. Department of Political Economy Jury JiDCF. Walter C . Owen, State Supreme Court Judge James C. Kerwin, State Supreme Court Hon. Henry R. Trumbower, Wisconsin Railroad Commission Hon. Nils P. Haugen, Wisconsin Ta.x Commission Dr. Joseph S. Evans, Professor of Clinical Medicine Decision — Athcnac 4, I Icspcria I Hesperia .• ffirmatl c Edward Lolis Del ' ss Elms Davio Potter Harold Martin Groves, Closer I III: hesperi.an te.am f m r ' f% Tillllllllllllllltlllll 17 iilUIIIMIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIinillllllllMIIIIIIIUtnilllllllllMIIIIIIIIMIIIIII! WISQ NSIX vs. UNIX 1:RSI 1 Ol- SOL I HI RN C.ALIIORNIA rnnily AuJitonum. Lm . ni:elc.y Cal . . ir( IS. fil7 The Debate Last year, for the first time in the history ol debatinj;, did Badfjer debaters accept an in Ha- tion to debate with a non-conference school as far west as the coast The Southern C .alifornia Trojan, the organ of the Law sch x)l. said of the debate I he W isconsin b ivs put up one of the best fights ever witnessed in the south and s(x)n had the g x)d will of the large audience (27()()i because of their clean cut arguments and sportsmanship. The Qtiestiou Resolved, that strikes and lockouts be prohibited on public utilities and in coal mines, prior to an investigation of the merits of the dispute by a governmental b xly. California . Hirmati e MoKKIS . NKRI M II. [:ai. . Mr;.s ( ' n.. NiN(; Foi.LbttK. Closer Wisconsin Negative Hickman . lui rt Zim.iiki; Harold L i:Rti r Kinni-: Lr:Rov JAMt-s Bi rlingami:, C ioser Deci. ' iion — Califi ' rnia 3. V i. i. ' n.vin Chairman of the Evening Jftx K Gavin W. Crak;, Los .Xngeles Superior Court Jury PRortssoR H. Lj. L ' pjomn. Los .Xngcles Ctiunty Superintendent Professor II. P. Ri;vnolus. Pomona High Schcx)l l K.ToR W. F. Claklin. Santa Monica I ligh Sch(x)l • lilllllllllllllllllllllltllllllllllllllHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIillllllllMIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIl Pat ' iKti illllllllllllilllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIItllltlltlllMMMIIIIIIIIItlll) t-i MICHIGAN vs. WISCONSIN Music Hall. I ' ruiav, March 30. 1917 QuesiUirt Resolved, that strikes and lockouts be prohibited in public utilities and in coal mines, prior to an in estigation of the merits of the dispute by a governmental body. MICHIC.W Negative Saml ' el D. Frankel R.V ' NtOND F Kahle Peter .A. Miller. Closer WISCONSIN Affirmative Frank William Coscrove Harold Martin Groves Leroy J AMES Bl ' rlingame, Closcr Decision — W na ' n.sin 2 Michigan I . Chairman of the Evening Hon. Georie P Hambrecht. Wisconsin Industrial Commission 7iiry Judge Harry Oi on. Chicago Municipal Court Professor James L. Lardner. Northwestern University Mr. George T. Palmer, Chicago THE ICTORIOLS B.ADGERS ;illlllliiillillllllllllliiiliiiiiiillililiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin Hiiiiiiii.iiiiiiiiiiiMiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiniiiiiiiJiii: i (if l JiirtrrnnU ' iviaJi ' i ' I; i fi 1„..__.IU.I| WISCONSIN vs. ILLINOIS Chamf ' aign, Illinois. March 30. 1917 Question Rcsoliwi. that strikes and lockouts he prohibited on public utilities and in coal mines, prior to an investigation ot the merits of the dispute bv a governmental body. WI.SCOXSIN ILLINOIS .Xfrirmativc Negative Harold l£ f£Rr.TT Kinne l£n v.. Ri-) A. SandliiR Rav Mathias Hkckman TRtMAN (J. Searle Herman Albert Zisc.hke. Closer Galen W Knight, Closer Decision — Wisconsin 0, Illinois i Chairnian of the Evcnitijl Ur, Kenl ric CI Baui.ix K. IX.m ul ihe ( College ol Letters and Science Jury Professor Clarion Hardy. Department- of Public Speaking, Northwestern Iniversity Dn . tor James P. Hall, Dean of Law 5 ch(X)l, Iniversity of Chicago Mr. Er)v ARD Sonnenschein, E.sq , (Chicago. 111. Ti IF. ni-B A I i-:rs tiilltlinilMIIIIIIMIIIIIIIillllllllllllllllllilMlllllllllllllllllltllllllllllMIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii: Jlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll. iiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiniiiiiiiliiiiiiiliii: f] ri Vi JutrmiUnuah WISCONSIN s. MINNESOTA Minneapolis. Minn . April ?. 1917 Qiicsiion Resolved, that the L ' nitcd States should adopt a system of universal military ser ice MINNESOTA Affirmative James L. Wick Fredo Osanno Claire 1. Weikert, Closer WISCONSIN Negative Francis Delmar Hic.son R Y Sanford Erl. ndson Pall Sulster Taylor, Closer Decision — Minnesota 2, Wisconsin Jury Mr. j. W. McCandless, Minneapolis. Minn Mr. Abbott L. Fletcher. Minneapolis. Minn. Professor I. M. Cochran. Carleton College. Northlield. Minn. IHE DEBATERS Tiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilliiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiliilliiiiiiiiiii Putt 2l V iiiiiiiiin s illMlilllltlllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIinilllllllllllltllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIlin Mi - 3 ■z:zi jL- Intrranirubt ii I ! riiXAS vs. W I SCONS IN Music Hall. Af nl 21 1 17 The Question Resolved, thill the I nitcd .St itcs should adopt a system of unixcrsal jry service. W I SCONS IN .Affirmati e P.ML ScHL ' STER Taylor William Slmplr Macfaimies ' TEXAS Negative Carl K. Callaway Jerome B. Crossman D, isum- nconMn 2 V.t.iv Chuirriiuti i f the hwiiiin; Professor S .orr H (.joonNicHr Jury Mr. Frank . , m ersi)N, Chicaso Mr. Stanley B. Houck Minneapolis Mr Lew R Sarett. I ' ni crsitv of Illinois MtiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiMitiiiiHiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiMUiiiiiiMiMitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniMMiiiiiitiMiiiiiniiiiiMln rati ::ii iiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiriiiiiiMiiii)iiiit(iii ' Mnu ' iniiuitiiiiiiniiiiiii ' - IN JutrnnUnuah- IOWA AGRICLLILRAL r.OLl,L:t]L£ vs. WISCONSIN AGRICULTURAL. COLLEGE Music Halt. March 2. 1917 THE ANNUAL AGRICL ' LTL RAL TRIANGLE The Question Rescliwi. that the Prc-idcnt of the L ' nitcd States he empowered to appoint a commi ' ion which shall ha e the p i er to lix prices on all staple articles, WISCONSIN Affirmative Hugo William Albertz Paul Axel Eke Morris Harry SiRELriN, Closer IOWA Negative E. T. Leavitt P N. ROBSON M. W. Emmel, Closer Decision — loua 2. V licoasin Chairman of the Evening Professor H. L. WAi srtR. IXpartmcnt of Soils Jury Prohessor H. P Bo idy, Ripon (xjllese. Ripon. Wis. Mr. a. E. Rutenbeck, Washington High School. Milwaukee. Wis. Professor J. S. Gaylord. Winona Normal School, Winona. Nlinn. n IP. ni- R A ri:RS niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiininiiHHiMiiiMMiitiiiiiiiiiiii Miiiiiiiiiiiuii iiililllir; Patt 27 1 IIIIDIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIi JhifriTiTlU ' nratr • ' IS! ' Mil W ISCONSIN vs. MIN l£SOIA i nivcrsity Farm. College oj Agriculture St Paul, Minn . March 2, 1917 Tll[£ AWL AL ACiRICl l.n RAl IRIANGLE Question Resolved, that the prc-idcnl of the L ' nitcd States vhould he empowered to appoint a commis!-ion which hall have the power to (ix prices on staple article M I NNESOr A W I SC ;ONS 1 Affirmative Neijative GidoRi.ii Hardimv Norton Tr. vis Amf.s F. A. Trii ' p John Clemf.nt Warnfr RoscoR T.ANNi-R. C ' loser Sf.ar ;knt PtiABotiv Wild, Closer Decision — Atinnesola 2. V i.sco i.sm Chairman of the Evening Mr Rob[£rt 1 loix.soN, Minneapolis, Minn. Jury PRor-KSSOR W. D. Jamii-son, CollcRc of St. Thomas Professor T. P. Bi;ye;r. Hamlinc L ' nivcrsity Professor A. 11 |oii sionf. Northwestern Conservatory II 11-: nr.B. TRRS ■ % llinnuillUllllilllllllllllllllllMIHIIIilllMillllllllillllMIIMIIIIIII) ' Patt l?l iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiR iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinnitiiiiiiiiiiiiir- WISCONSIN vs. MICHIGAN Mid-West Debating League Fourth Annual Series lliU Audilorium. Ann Arbor, Michigan, March 22, 1918 Qiu ' stiori Resolted, that the cabinet-pariiiimcntMry Icirm nl government should be substituted lor our present form of state government. MICHIG.W .Affirmative Arthur J. Ada.ms Robert F. Matthews Ch.ari.es V ' . Krolt, Closer WISCONSIN Negative Joseph Barnes Beach Se, rcf.nt Peabodv Wild Rav Sanford Erlan ' DSON, Closer Decision — Michigan 3, ' ' X ' isconsin Chairman of the Eieuiri i Professor E. C. Goiidarii. L nnersity ol .Michigan Jury Professor H. S. Woodard, Western Reserve University Professor V. A. Ketcham, Ohio State L ' niversity Professor C. M. Newcomb, Ohio Wesleyan L ' niversity It IE-. i:)EB. TERS TiliiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiii Pat, 17i ililinilllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIII - r- — ! I ' S ' lllil i;:- 1 p i ' ::i 1i); ! 1 m 3HlrnulUH raic —  - V rf i M ii i Hll ILLINOIS vs. WISCONSIN Mid-Wc-.t IXbiitirifj League Fiiurth Annuiil Series Musu Hall. March 22. 1 1 S Qtiistion Ri ' .fotted . thai ihc stales should adopt a cabinet -parliamentary system of {jovernmcnt. WISCONSIN ILLINOIS . ffirmati c Negative John (j i-mi.vt Warner HoRAt;E Carman Harold Martin Groves John Powell. Jr. Leroy James Blrlincame Closer Edward B. Hayes, Closer Decision — W hcorfiin I. Illinoi. ' : 2. Chairman of the Evening Proei;ssor Joseph Jastrow. Oepartment ol Piiilosophy Jury Professor Joseph M. Thomas. Lniversity of Minnesota Mr. Willard E. .Atkins, University of Chicago Professor (]lenn N Mirrv. Lni ersity of Iowa ri IE DEB. I ERS I lillilllllllllllllllllllllMIMIIIIIIMHIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllilUIIIIIIIMIUIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIlr. I ' atr iT4 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii !iiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiivf sopnoMOKL SLiMi-PLBLic i: i:iuiL;s I 7 it ' Annual Inlcr-Literary Society E Sc t homorc VKi tv ATHENAIi s. HESPERIA 1 llfspt-na Hall. May .V. ' ) ' £ Question H Resolved, that lor the L nitcd States, the English cabinet k rm ol government is preferable to = the present presidential form. HESPERIA AmilNAE = AHirmativc Negative ALLt-;N Eic.ENE Hatch David Albert Nkwcomur E R. L( H Orio Nariger Josi .ph Barnks Bi£a(:h E Harolo Martin Groves. Closer Vashin(.ton Ir t . CLt:vr,i.AND, Closer = Decision — I lesfieria 2. Alhenae I 3 Jury E Professor. I. M. O ' Neill Proi i ss ir F. .A. Oc.c. = Mr. C. a. S.vii th = HESPERIA vs. PHILOMATH I A I Phlomathia Hall. .May IS. 1917 E Question Resolved, that the state legislature of Wisconsin should pass a law pro iding lor a minimum wage scale for men. E HESPERIA PHILOMAIIIIA I .Affirmative Negative = Philip Hammon Parrish Darwin Elroy Bruns 3 Irwin TiiEotKiRE MoHME Harold James Pratt E Edward Lol is Deuss, Closer Glenn Bl ' rton Warren, Closer = Decision — Hesperia i. Philomathia ZZ Jury E Mr. S. L. VIiller Mr. L. B. Krueger = Milton Moses = PHILOMATHIA vs. ATHENAE | . lhenae Hall. May IS. 1917 = Question = Resolved, that for the I nitcd States the linglish cabinet form of goxernmjnt is preferable to the present proidcntial form. E .ATHENAE PI lll.OMA 1 1 IIA E Affirmative Negative — Ben Wishnefsky Jamf s Mathew Hayden 2 Paul Hoffman Conway (-. Geor ;e Stot.kwell E Phiup Fox La Follette. Closer Frank Willi m C ' osr.RovE. (Closer Decision — Alhenae 2, Philomalhia I Z Jury 5 PROFIS.S1IM U 11 I I M I I KlEKHOFER PrOFI£SSOK R J SwiNSON S Professor Warner Taylor 5 niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiMilliiiiiiiiiiMiiniiiitiiiiiiiiiiiinMiiiiiiintiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiniMiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiT iHiiiiiiiiiiiMiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii (dwdcu] if ! Mi HI XH ' - n NOI IHERN ORATOR I C:AL LEAGUE I W UN rY-SE I£M 1 1 ANM AI, CO ' n£ST ( niiiTsity oj Stinnesola, Simncatvlts, Minn. Mux 4. Contestants EinvAKD M Li IM.STON, Wisconsin. The Final Test Lcx.AN Hall, Norlhwcstern. Amencannalion Ralph Carllore. Michigan. T if Scholar and the .Vociu is O. W. Cli-.m, C ' hicaso. The Test of Denwcracy Fr, N(:i;s Kfilv, Minnesota, Before Feminism and After D. A. Armhrlstkr, Iowa, The Nationalization of the Monroe Doctrine Wilfred E a s, Oborlin, The Greater luiyalty Decision — N ' orlhwcstcrn, first, Michisan, second, C.hicago. third Jury Professor J. M. O ' N ' fill, Lnivcrsity of Wisconsin Professor I L. Lardnf.r, Northwestern Lni ersity Professor I-. M. Rartc;, University of Minnesota Profi ssor R. n T. HoLLisiKR, I ni ersity of Michigan Professor Lew R Sarfi i. L niversity of Illinois Professor Glenn N. Merry. L ' niversity of Iowa Professor William G. CIaski y, Oberlin Clollege ' liililKllllllllllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMllllllllll ' Pa,, 2;: iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii .iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiniiii rr iti (U Li THE HAMILTON ORATOR IC.Al, CONTEST Hamilton Club, Chicago. Ill . Friday, March 21 1917 Cdtucsttints Everybody ' s Business, Lerov J. Burlincame. University of Wisconsin The New Diplomacy, Vircil H. Hancher, University of Iowa Industrial LX ' mocracy, EowrN E. VoicT, Northwestern University Chairman of the Evening Walter F. Olds, Chicago Jury Mr. Robert MoVIurdv, Chicago Mr. Henry E. Sever. Chicago Rev. Mr. Arthur J. Francis, Chicago Decision First — Iowa Second — Northwestern Third — V ' isconsin Tllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll Pair 177 Miiiiiniiiiiiiiilllliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiii lllllllllllllllllllllllll!. Junior Ex f R,vm f . i ' micrstly I lull [• Hru;iry 27. 1118 Contestants |ii|is LlSLlE, Kn (., Allunac. I Iw Wronti Atliliidc en llw War 1 IvROLO Maiuin (iRdM.s. Hc-pcTJ;!. W 7iy .i( Pi ' acv W i( i- c i utory ' ' Miss HtLfcN B Smith. C astalm, Woman anJ the War Miss FLORi; :r W ' hitbeck. Pythia. Prussian and Armn- can Ideals Decision — Miss Hpj.f.n Smith, first. Harold CiRovus. second Chairman of the Erenins 0 ID Bl RSMARr Bl 1 Jury Miss Ei sii; Gibbon Mho K. Swanion. lo Profpssor W I ( hasp. IXparimcnt of 1 listory A Junior Open Room 6). t ' niivr.si ci(( March 5. MLS Ciiuti-stanls |oHS Li SI II Kl 11.. I he ron Altitude on the War I Iaroi D Mavopi I- 1 1 LP, Civilian Mobilization I Iaropd Mariis (iRo ps. 77u ' Xeiv Faith Bl N ISHNPISKV. CVl(li(. m KpaTS Synn (Jll ' , The Prohlem of Chinese Immigration Heiiuon -1 Iakoi.d (iRoMs. first I 1.1 si ii Klic second Chairinon if thv EicninU I ' .DW ARD I 1 II IS I )l I ss Jury Mrs. Ill i:ahi hi P. I It m Pkoi pssoR O I Cami ' hpi I . Jr. HiiniilllillllilMllliiiiilllillllllllliilMlllilllliiiiiiillli ' illMIIIIIIIMIIIi :illllllHliinilMIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIt: Sophomore Open Unhvrstly Hall, vfcriiurv 20. I .S ' (Pontes rati IS Baron DeHirsi.h Mlvlr. 77ii. ' BuJ cl System Bkrnard Edward Meyers, War, the Great Democralizer Harry Malrice Rosenbll ' M Annrica. the Pre.wnvr of Denttxracy Decision — Meyer, first: Meyers, second Chairman o) the £ifm ' nj Fred M Bkkf i. Jury Mrs Ei.i:areth P. Hunt Ovid Bernhart Blix f % Ya Freshmen Dec ilespena Hall. .March 2S. I9IS Contestants Hyman Joseph Bilansky. The Folks Over There 1 {erman Harry Sinaiko Darrow ' s Plea for Haywood r. Foster Strong, The Vision of War Samuel Goldman, Antonio Masico Sterling Tracy, Wilson ' s War Message R. MiLF Warner. War, Socialism anJ Humanism James Hugo Wegener, Why We Are Fighting Stanislalis Stephen Jordan, WTiy We . ' re at War IsADORE Arnold Perstein, Darrow ' s Plea for HaywooU Decision — Warner, first: Tracy, second: Goi dman, third Chairman of the Hvi-tiiriil Ovid Bernhart Blix . liry Proefssor JM. O ' N ' eili Prohssor 1 1 Ci I )oi ,iiton Proiessor O J Campbell, Jr niiiiiiMiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiniiitur; iillliilililllii iiiiiiili MIMMMIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIirililllllllllllllllllllllllllllll FINAL CONTEST Music Hall. March .V. I9IS Contestants BrN Ei.LMAN, Senior, A Xalion .s Ki u ic) Live LiROY Jamks BuRLiNx.AMi.. Senior. Intcrnalwnal lmf cnali.sm Milton Mosts. Senior, (hir Duly lo ihe Child | |{N I.E si.ir; Ki.i .. Junior. The Wrong AttiluJc on ihc War liARON Di.HiRScH Meylr. Sophomorc. The Budget Syslem Miss 1 Iili :n Bklle Smiih. Castalia. Women and the ar Harold Mariin CJRovrs. Junior. The ' eu- Taith Decision — BuRLlNCAMi-. first. Mosi :s, second , Miss Smiih and Gro i.s, third. Chairman oj the Evenins 0 ID BliRNllARI I M. Proif-ssor J M. O ' Neill Jury Mrs. Elizabeth P. Hint SENIOR OPEN Room 212 L ' niversiis Hall. March 6, I ' IS Contestants Leroy James Bl ' RI.ini.ami . International Imperialism Milton Moses, Our Duty to the Child Ben Ellman, . ' Xalion ' s Right to Live Chairman of the Eveninji 0 iD Berniiari Blix Jury Proeessor J. M. O ' Neill Proeessor H. G. Houghton Decision — .Xrranficd accordin;; to rank. % ' iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiu5 Patt 2X0 uiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiii ' J niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiillllilliiiiilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilllllliiiiiiiiMKiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin ;i;iiiiiiiiMllllliliiiiiiiiu!iii!iiiiliiiliiilliiiiiilliiillitiiiiiiiiiiillii. C ' ] .:iJJ, Hf? n Hi I li (.o William ALiitRT: Mahlon Hlmi ' iiri;v Caradim- Bi:n Lol is Ellman Mil I ON MosHs John William Nash Ralph Glnn Sithkr Ernf.st Jamls Brown Daniel [Howard Cass Pall Hoi-iman C ' onway Morris Finskv Arihl r Roi.r Foss I AMLs Howard Gri-ijnbliu. John Llslil: Kllx; Ph il ir Fo La f-oLiriTTL John S hl vllr Lini-;n Harold Rolk Nof.r Chauncuy James Pellow Arnol Victor Roberts Malrice Ross S. Llewellyn Spengler Marry Steeholm Ben Wishneksky C. Edwin Ba(.ii Joseph Barnes Bi a(.h John Eschiylkr Lawrence Waterulry I Iai.l Herman Kenneth LIarley Rudolph Robert I noerr Ray Pi ii r Li hii nwalnlr Sidney Frederick Moody Ernest I Ierman Pett Joseph Harold Pleck Kar er Lol ' is Plestow LiN oLN Andrew Ql aruer ; Richard LIarlon Tyrrell loHN Hashrolck an ' leck El.c.ene Dui i M Clarence Edward Fli.ina S. SiEPHiiN Jordan John William Lowi; LsADORL Arnold Persiein Joseph Donald Roihchild Aaron Sheini-eld OuERT Frank V ' oi.l illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIl Pax, 2.1: illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllU :imi i ae}isi ' fkiS9:- ' ?miSi ism s is Linm Van VIcek Dupont Beach Moses La Folk-uc Cass Jordan Pucstow Voll Hall Spengler Moody Altcrt: Klug Caradinc Pctt Wishncfskv Rothchild Schcinfcid Fugina Ellman Ross Crecnl-Krre Officers Presidents — Milton Mosf.s. Hico William Alkf.rtz. Bun Loi is Ellman Vice-Presidents— H y cu RoLF Noer. Chalncev jAvrs Pf.llow. Joseph Barnes Beach Secretaries — Joseph Barnes Beach. John Leslie Klu:. Treasurer — Paul Hoffman Conway Censors — Mahlon Humphrey Car. ' hdine. John ii liam Nash. Harold Rolf Noi r Fiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiii; V • MtllMinillllMIIIIIMIIIIMIilllllllMIIIIIIMIi: iiiiiriiMiiiiiii f ' r Charles I.ippincoit Andrews Ovid Blrniiarf Blix Olaf Flcxii) Lyel Newton Jenkins Albert 1 Ienry Kohlman J Glenn McWilliams John Coventry ivIiller Mynie Gustav Peterman Ellis David Potter Warren Greoo Wheeler 1919 Keats Synn Ci lu Edward Louis Dei ' ss Ernest Fri:d Freymiller Harold Martin Groves Allen Eugene Hatch Irwin Theodore Mohme Ralph Otto Naeziger Oscar Albert Ols(3n Edward Lee Perkins Raymond Joseph Suchy Allen Whelan 1 Iarry Aronson Leonard Bercstein Walter Borden Blair John Warren Oiwan Kenneth Armilr Cullen James Roland Elliott William Cullkkson ItRWiN Alder I I Ieniien FrI DIRK. ArIIIIR Horion 1 li RMAN I Iarry 1 li m r Roberi KENNEm Irvine HoBART Henry Kleiziin Nei.s Christian Lerdahl Baron DeI Iirsh Meyer I IaRVEY GlSIAV Ml YER Bi:rnard Edward Meyers Pait Robin Rl HARD El WARD SaDLII.R WlLl 1AM Sll RN )ami,s 1 ll (.o Wi;t,ENi:R Ri ihwinBinmii Bordi n 1 Iaroi I) 0 lo I- ' roiiba(.ii iitlllllUlllllltllMIIIIMMIIIIIIIIIIItllllllllllllllllllMllllllllll: iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir illllllllllllllllllllll. llllllillllllllli jiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil: ii SreffiSSS5i5tiX?SSSJW,0)XftS e ' 55Sa Hi SBtrta i ' iiss i i imiisstiiiissaaistsifeibt. 3 :t5;M l fU f f f f 4| t % % Chu Olson Blair Frcymillcr Lcrdahl Hcntxcn Frohbach Cowan Groves Nafzrgcr Wegener Kletiicn Blix Meyers Mohmc Irvine H. G. VIeycr iJcrgMcin Elliott Stern Morton Suchy Deuss Borden B D. Meyer Perkinb AnJr. O ficcrs Presidents — Ovid Bernhart Blix J. Glenn McW ' illiams, Ellis David Potter K ' ice-Presidcnts — Warren GREt t. Wheeler. Cjiarles Lippincott Andrews, Keats Synn Chu Secretaries — Bernard Edward Meyers, Hcibart Henry Kletzien, Nels Chris- tian Lerdahl Treasurers — Edward Lol ' is Deuss, Olaf Flood Censors — Allen Eugene Hatch, Kenneth Arthur Cullen. Ernest Fred Frey- MILLER TillllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMIIIIIMIIIIIIIlim Pate inf fflfillllllllllllllllllllllMIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIMIIIIIItllMIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIU Philomathia U.ihl Llp thut2 lluhllclJ Builingoin.; Wiiu hmtrv Looinis V lison (lldcnburB Gilbert McMuMcn P.nniv SlronR Trachtc naifco Watlcrs Drcdiic Staidl Wolf Ki arns Stabo Schlich l itk Pcsth lirlandvm 1 lanvc n Bump Warren Tracy Officers Presidents I,EROY JaMIIS BuRLINT.AMIi Ray Saniord Erlandson Armand JAMF.s Quick Secretaries W iiiiNKY North Seymour liDWARn Peter Kearns V ice-PresiJerus Stanley Anion Staidl JAMES Mat I HEW Hayokn George Daniel Spohn Treasurers Glenn Burton Warren GioRt.E Dam El Spohn tcttil ers Aruil R Andriavs Leroy Jami-S Burlingame Ray Saneord [Irlandson James John 1 Iayden 1 Iyman Siani.ey Lipm hut: Armani) James Ql ick Ira Oris Slogiimb Sear(.eni Peabody Wild Darwin Elroy Bruns James Mai ihew Hayden William Kasiska Ivan I.ouis Lanc.e 1 Iarold James Pratt 1920 Edward Peter Ki:arns Fredi:ri(.k William Oldenuirg John Pinni;y C:laren(.e Ramsett ( ' larence Giluert ( JIARLI :S ASSOVSKY Warren lioHL Warner Smith Bump ' I ' mom s Joseph Dreix.e Clyde liu ' Riis Emery 1 ll RMAN Bl RNARD I IaLPI RIN Fridirk K I IaNM N Karl X ' uss I lr)HLi 1 1 1 I Iarry (ill ki hi 1921 I ' rank Alswh rtii Ross N. EiviND Stabo SjANLEY Anion Si aide Glenn Burton Warren Joseph Oria Wilson |onN Rudolph S.iilk her ' hiiney Nor hh Seymolr George Daniel Spohn Wyman Sydney Smith Irachte I Iarlow I Ienry I.(x-vmis CiLenn Jonah i N Mi Mulli N Anhiony II liam Pi Mil Emil Morris S hmidi I ll-RMAN SiNAIKil Thomas I-ush r Sirong Sterling I In i Irai ' y George: I Ianawai i Watii-rs I.ORELLE ArHRiR WoLP • illlllllliltlilllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIilllMIIIIIIIJIIIIIIIIIHIinillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltllU; Pa,, ;.u. III IIIIIMIIIIIII IIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIItlllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII ' . Afrrictiltural Literary Society Shane Stokcnbcrg Sktnner Nelson Hood Jen Goldman H-ncs Smich Daniclson Warner Ehltng n Rcid Gaffney Lum Cole Woodley Kochic Kennard Brace Lcpkovsky Eke Hcndrtckson Lampman Lcc Jon« Officers Isl Quarter 2nd Quarter 3rd Quarter Presidents . J ENSEN Reid Warner ice-Presidents . Hood Danielson Smith Secretaries . Kennard Goldman Davis Treasurers . . Hendrickson Davis Wilcox Sergeants-at-. rms . Eke Skinner Reid A i ' ; i ic rs Graduate School DiH Hoe Lee William H. Woodley Charles C. Brace Deane G. Davis Clarence I. Hendrickson Chester Hoesly SeVERT M. J ENSEN DwicHT C Kennard Tracy R. Shane John C. Warner J. Arlington Anderson Harold H. Cole Pall A. Eke Edward J. Gaffney William Platt Haves Arthl R N. Wilcox Robin Hood James H.Jones Duncj n H. Reid Russell W. Skinner Hugo A. Stoltenberc Jesse A. Danielson Luster E. Hines N ' alter B. p. Koehler Wyman S. Smi th 1920 Clifford E. Lampman Samuel Lepkovsky Simon Luban Nels T. Nelson Samuel Goldman TiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiirMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Mliiiiiiir; iiiiiiiiMiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiii Ciistalia Rogers Grutop B..II RiRRs Kinnc kcr Smith I luJs Jonis Kiikhofcr Sr First ScmcsWr Marion Li;cile Dawson .• da Oi (;a Horn l£srHiiR Acnrs C ' oi.lins DoROIllY El.lZABICTH KliNNKOY Kaiiii RiNi: Annk Fi;di)E Ht,rn Hcndr.chs MijJc-itt Titus Olhnch :n Jacohs Nelson Kundcrt Sutherland SirKlair Davison H a.llms JuIk. Moc Scnnctt Nocl:cl iry Churchill Searlcs Hubbard Marshall (XJcRard Officers PrexuLml iCf-Pre.sidenl Secretary Treasurer Miuteal Director Second Semester Esther A ;ni-.s Collins Gertri ' df. Marcaretta Jacobs Norma Eleanor Chlrchill Mary Con erse Kaiherine. Anne Fedde Members Geor(,e Brymilpe Ant ndsen Esther A(.nes Caillins Helen Jeanetie C ' ollins Emma Ore ichen Corsi e r Marion Iacili-; Owvson Jessie Marion Evans Annette Foth . da Olc.a Horn Miriam Bi ardsliv 1 Iluuard Mary I Iarlow Hloson Lai ' ra Jllio Helen I RENE Lolnsblry Franci :s Iheodosia Marun Pansy Mae Modesiit SiCRIO WlNlERED MoE Incrid Nelson Dorothy Emma Reid Llcy Ella Rogers Fern Searles Mar(.aret Denlin Sennet t Martha Alea Skaar Alberta Margaret Tttls LlELLA FRANtJiS OK.HT Charline Marie Wackman Inathryn Mae Boll Norma Eli;anor Chlrchill l.f)is Adelyn Dan is Kaiherine. Anne: I-edde Mii.oREn Lkili- Frazier Marie Emily Hji rmstao Gertritie Mar .arei I a )a oI ' S DoROiHY Eli:ai I 111 Kenni-; Jane Ravlsay Grant Marshall Ethel Janmelle Oi ei aro Marion Grace Olbrich Lot_iSE Parker 1 Ie.li:n Bi;li I- Smihi Ruth Estelle; Smiiii RiriH Carol Smith Elisaiuuii Si iherlano Lillian Eewis CoNSiANc E Olds Bi rniiam Mary Converse I.ela I Ie.ndrichs I-1rnaJl ' Lia Kk.kiioi i;r ELIZAHEfH Kl ' NPERI Flore N(i-; May I.amim ri Mar(.i I RiH- Cornelia Markham (.ii RiRini- Mi!Riii-y Noii:el (.ilAHYS iy YN Rll.(.S Mil nRi:i Qlaniha Sini i air Helen (;aihi-kine Cham; Dorohiy Joni s A(.NEs Emily (jroioi-horsi ' iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii .iiiltiiiiiiiiiiii: uillllllllllllllllllllllllllllltllti- r „i, 2IIS tillllllllllillllllMMIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIll .iiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiL Pvthia l ul- ..IJ Hessman Hopson A inchcll Bruff inlHinz McMcan-. Sktiton McMurrav Dick McKay Whitbcck Martin Portcrficid Nvstrom Officers Agnes Cecelia Skllion ... President LuciLE Harriet Berg . Vice-President Elizabeth Ruth Nvstrom Treasurer Florence VHiTBEt;K Secretary Members 191S LuciLE Harriet Berg VUry Dick Mary Florence Flemin(, Perle Mary Hopson .-Vman-da Hessman IVA NODENE KeTCHAM Theresa Marie Kleinhein: Frances Josephine McIv, y Mariorie McMlrray Edith Margaret Martin Agnes Cecelia Skelton Norma Hoffman Stauffer A. Lucille Warren 1919 Louise Harriet Beaucage Alma Martha Braun Winifred Bruff Lol ' ise Lindsley Emerson Karen Fredrickka Falk Margaret Ruth Johnson MvRGARET IsABELLE MeLAAS Rose Katharine Newman Elizabeth Ruth Nystrom Eleanor Margaret O ' Laughlin W. Mildred Pederson Evelyn Alic;e Phillips Mildred Priscilla Ruisvold Florence Whitbeck Helen Bauchers Acnes M m i ie Kt ller Huldah Hedwig Cerds Marc.aret MoMeans IsAHELLE Sanderson JiciiwALBE l jLPHiNE Wood ' |RA WlN ;llELL Ediiii Mabii: Zander ' ■■■■■ ' ■i tiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiit I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin tiiitiniiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMM.: ' MiiniiiititiiiMiiiuiiiiiiiMlMliitiiiiiiiiiiitMiitniiittiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiililililliliililiiiiiiiiilllllliiiiiiiiiiin Mililar 7 Military Instruction at the Univer- sity oi Wisconsin and tnc War ll-RE has been estdblishcd at ihis University an Infantry L ' nit, Senior Division. Reserve Officers ' I raining Corps, the regulations and instructions : ir which are contained in General Order No. 40, W.ir I Vpartmcnt, Washington. D. C. Sept. 20. lOlo. Ihe primary object for the establishing of this unit is to qualify by systematic and standard methcKis of training, students at this L ' niversity for reserve officers in the army of the L ' nited States, and as leaders of our troops in this great world war and future emergencies. It is at insti- tutions such as this that the War Department will have to lixjk for officers ' material for the newly organi:ed troops and it is at such institutions as this that the best qualified material w ill be found. The men who attended the first training camps for offi- cers were not men Kho were required to ha e had prc- ious military training, but were men from ci il life who had gtxxi reputations and standing, and it was found that the college men with brains and previous military training made the better leaders of men. It has been found in all the camps that the drafted men who are college men and who t x)k. while at college, the required military training, arc far superior to the officers who received their commissions in the citizens ' training camps as first organized and who had no previous training. These university men ft rm the only source of supply for the rcscrxc officers who will undoubtedly lead our trcxips in battle. The number of military trained students of this L ' niver- sity who have entered the ser ice. is. I am sure, higher in proportion to attendance than any other similar institu- tion in the country. The forty-seven candidates now at the Third Officers ' Training CUimp from this L ' ni ersity arc men of excellent ability as leaders of men and will without question K- commissioned in the l ' nited States Army as leaders of our trcHjps. a.. ' ■A., 4 e ■ Itlllllllllllllllilllllllllltllllllllllllllllllli itlMlllltlllllli i nil- ' (It-FKKRS | ( (AIMWn illllllllliniltlllMIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIItL: QAJOR ARTHL R R KliRW IN. L . S. A . retired, was detailed by the War Department as Professor of Military Science and Tactics at the L ' ni ersity of Wisconsin in Septem- ber. I ' - I7. Pre ious to this time Major Kerwin pursued an eventful career. In 8 ' 2 he was admitted to the L ' nited States Military .Academy at West Point, and in 18% he was gradu- ated from that academy and commissioned as a second lieutenant in the i ' wcnty-tifth Infantry. at that time stationed in Montana In the Cuban campaign of 1898 Major Kerwin, at that time a lieutenant, saw his first actual service. Promotion to the grade of first lieutenant followed in ISW, and soon thereafter Major Kerwin accompanied the Thirteenth Infantry to the Philippine Islands. While in the Philippine campaigns Major Kerwin recei ed his promotion to the grade of captain. In l - )! he returned with his regiment to California, but in four years was again sent to the Philippine Islands, where he served for two years I pon his return to this country Major Kerwin was detailed for a year at the .Xrmy Schcxjl of the Line, located at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. His third and last trip to the Philippine Islands occurred in I ' l 1 From there he was assigned to Fort William H Seward. .Alaska, where he was on duty for two years. Lpon his return he was assigned to the Si.xth Infantry at El Paso. Texas, and with this regiment he was a participant in the NIexican Expedition under General Pershing in 1 ' )1C . As a result of this cam- paign. Major Kerw in was promoted to the grade of major, and during the ensuing year he was on active duty with his regiment in Texas. His career is brought up to date by his assignment to the l ' ni er it cfWi onMn -illllilllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIHMMIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIItllllllllllllllli; • ,1 • 2- I lllllllllllllllltl ' - UIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIiiniMIIIII The University of Wisconsin (Jorps of (bidets Infantry Unit. Senior Division Resent ' Oflkers Training Corj3s COMMAMMNT Major Artiil r Raphakl Ki;rwin, L ' . S. A, iRotircdl ASSISIAN IS lO COMMANDANT Battalion Skrgkant Major Wiujam G. Atkins, L ' . S A. (Retired) FlRsr SLRt.iiANi Elgene McDonnuli.. L ' . S. a. (Reiircd) lirst Ref,iini:nl (Colonel Arihlr C. Nillsln Lieutenant Colonel Allen M. Slighter Captain and Adjutant Irving J. Greenslade C iptain and Supply Officer William Balderston Band Major Jesse E. Salgstad Captain Rov A. Brendel First Lieutenant E. VIorris Jones First Lieutenant George H. Stleber First Lieutenant J- F. Roberts Second Lieutenant RoscoE V ' anderbie I ' trsI Battalion lajor COMPANY A Captain Earl A. Heassler Captain First Lieut. Armin D. Schult: First Lieut. Second Lieut. Wallace R. Zimmerman Second Lieut. Captain First Lieut. Second Lieut. COMPANY c J. George Crownhart Leroy Bl ' rlingame Leonard M. Johnson (iiptain First Lieut. Second Lieut. -Second Lieut. ' erne ' . V ' arney company b . Theodore L. Scholt: Harry A. Phillips Frank A. Ross company d „ Milton P Griswold J. X ' ernon Steinle William S ;h vart: 1 Iarrison C Barnt_s Captain First Lieut. Second Licul O.MPANY E Harold J. Pratt Lennox A. Haldeman 1 )N ' . Slaker Cjiptain Second Lieut Second Lieut company i- Nelson B. Tan WiRTH F. Fer(;er Ki NNi III S Day Second Battalion Major Cjipiain f-irsl Lieut. Second Lieut. Second Lieut COMPANY G G. Walter Nasii CJiARi.Es W. Crak; Al.VIN R Kl.ANN Wll I IS R ( TMMINCiS Cjiptuin First Lieut. Second Lieut. RoMiRi A. Ba. ii;r COMPANY II Marion A Knumit John C. Wolie Norman T. Meineke ' I ' liiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiililillllliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiimiiik; iJIHIIIMIIIIIIIinitllllllllMtltltnitllllUIUttlMtltlllUllfll MiiiMiniKiiiiiiiniMMiHiini NiclMrn SlithuT Siiuu tiiJ V ' urnty Uaxtt Crccnvhidc BnKlt-r ton Hr.-n.)r- Vandcrbic Hcasslcr Ztmmcrman Scholtz Phillips Ross (Imwnhnrt UuriinKiimc un wiiio Sicinic bchwariz B;irncN niniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiinitiiiiniiiiiiiiniiMiiiiiiitiiiintitifiitiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiniiiiiiiiiiiiMiitiiiiin i;iiii.;:iiniiillltillilillllilliiiliilllilllllllllllllMtlllllllllllltllllllllllllllllllltllllllllllllllllllllllllll!: First Lieut. First Lieut. CUiptijiii First Lieut. Second Lieut . ( OMPANY I M. Gordon I.wlor John W. McPiif.rrin rO IP. NY L ' lLl.l. M B. LDr:RSTON R.w E Bf.hrens ALTUR L. Maii;b Captain First Lieut. Second Lieut C-aptain First Lieut. First Lieut. ; OMPANY K John S. BARiLiirr Robi;rt L. RtwfiY LoWl.l.L W 1 llMMl-F.R 1 OMPANY M Klnneih E. Bahi-; Marcus L. Baxtlr Roy V. James Major Third Ballalion Seargeni P Wild COMPANY N Captain Thayer Z. Clayton First Lieut. .Vrthlr O. Olson First Lieut. Menry R. Kat:enstein tOMPANY O Captain .... Mahlon 1 1. Caradine Second Lieut. . Joseph C. Taylor Second Lieut. Robin Hood Captain First Lieut. Second Lieut. (O.MPANI p Walter E .Mleller Raymond H. S :hmi I : OoNALD . Reynolds Captain First Lieut. Second Lieut. COMPANY Q Robert i. Brewer Peter Walraven Richard H. Tyrell Company r Captain Tho.mas W, Tutile Captain First Lieut. Alfred H. ' I ' aylor Fi rst Lieut. Second Lieut. Loring T. Hammond Second Lieut. Second Lieut. . Stanley R. McCandless .Second Lieut company s George P. Miller Lawrence W. Hall Hans F. Evimerling LOTHROP F. FOLLETT Officers I ' nassi nL l Capiain Lyman , [iEEMAN Capiain Ray E Behrens Roll of Officers who have left the Cadet Corj s and their Commands d ■Stales. Captain Seth W. Pollard Captain Vernon W. Packard .... Captain Carl W. Maedje Captain Otto I L BEiiRENDr Captain Hobart E. Bondi First Liei ' tenant Glenn L Gardini-r FiRsr LiELTiNANT .Andrew J Brann First Liel ' I ENANt Thomas C. Ct.ark First Lieimenant Theodrii.k W. Bradford Second LiEuiENANt Lol ' in P. Ewald Second Lieutenant c;f:rald S. McWili iams Second Lieitenant I Iarold J. St.iii heri . Second Lii-i ienant 1 1 Parki r Wi i ks enter the senice oj the L niled Ex-Company I Ex-Company H Ex-Company F Ex-Company M Ex-Company I Ex-Company L Ex-Cx)niF any P Ex-Company F Ex-0)mpany G Ex-Company C Ex-Cx)mpany N Ex-CJ mpany G l-A-Cx)mpany A HlilllMllflllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIHIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIi IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIKIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMMIIIIIMIIIII ' - s. niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiitiiiiitHiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiir: Pair : ' Hi liHIIIIttlllMUIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIi ilillllllllllllllllL The Annual Inspection Bv Colonic. C F. C ' raix. L S NVititmal Army C l {E unnual inspci V stripped of ihc pcction of 1917 will be ever memorable in the annals f Cadets. L ' niversity of Wisconsin With the Corps pped of ihe greater part of its officers and non-commissioned officers and a larf e number of privates, it put up an exhibition that was equalled by few and surpassed by none of the institutions inspected by Colonel (now General) Julius A Penn. Linited States Army War with Germany was declared April tith. Immediately some three hundred students withdrew from their academic courses and entered upon a course of intensi e military training with a iew to obtaining commis- sions in the army This was a hard blow to the Corps, as naturally every man who was eligible elected to take this course and the result was that regiments lost their field officers and companies lost their company officers ' rift| and nf)n-commissioncd officers and many prisates. 1 lowever, those left 3 3 turned to with a will. Captains and lieutenants tcx)k command of battal- m ions — sergeants took command of companies — corporals and privates B t(xjk command of platoons, all of which will happen o er there when the W S casualty lists commence to roll in. ■ H I he C!orps, in a brigade of two regiments, was formed at CUimp Randall 4 1 1 at 8:00 .X M under the command of C ' olonel Fred J. H(xiges. Clolonel Penn then inspected and reviewed the brigade. Following the inspection Cjjldm 1 (.KM-. 11 j| activities of the preceding year were exhibited, including close and extended order by company and battalion, bayonet combat, first aid instruction, military calistenics. position and aiming drills and gallery practice, shelter tent pitching, signaling with (lag. semaphore, heliograph, telephone, telegraph, and radio, machine gun work, ceremonies, etc. .illllllllllllllllUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMMIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIII iiiiiiiiiiilillllliiiiiiiiliiiliriiillliilillr iiiiriiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinitniiiMiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiir The exercises lusted until noon and the inspector did not have an idle moment. He was parti- cularly impressed by the work of the Sisnal IX-tachment under Capt. G. Eiirl Wallis, and the Machine dun work under Captain Allen Slichter. I he work of two compjinies in intensive training (two companies had already gone to the truininc camp at Fort Sheridan) was also exhibited to the inspector and excited his favorable comment. The aftcmotins work consisted in an attack by a force under Colonel Fred J. Hodges upon the trenches constructed by the companies undergoing intensive training. These trenches were defended by the intensives themsehcs and the Machine Gun C ompiiny under Major C. M. Jansky. The attacking force was so superior in numbers that the capture of the trenches was inevitable, but the defense was so stubborn that the mission of the defenders would have been accomplished under the terms of the problem. .Mthough the report of the inspector could not have been more favorable, it failed to secure for the University a distinguished rating because at the date of inspection no unit of the Re- serve Officers ' Training Corps had been established and the War Department had decided to rate as distinguished institutions only those at which such units had been organized. But if not distinguished in name, is not the Corps of Cadets, University of Wisconsin, dis- tingviished in fact by its two hundred odd representatives, members of the Corps during the academic year I9I( -I9I7, who are serving as commissioned officers in the armed forces of their count ry 7 INCE leaving the L ' niversity of Wisconsin in November. 1910. Major Wrightson. at that time V a captain, has had a great variety of experience and has again seen actual service. With y - ' his regiment he accompanied General Pershing ' s forces in the Mexican campaign, and in his campiaign he reached a point in the interior of Mexico 150 miles south of the border. Upon the withdrawal of our troops .Major Wrightson. with the Seventeenth Infantry, was detailed for duty guarding interned German sailors at Fort Oglethorpe. Georgia. Upon the outbreak of the war he was detailed as an instructor and company commander in the Officers ' Training Camp at CTiicamauga Park. Georgia. In .August, 1 117. Major Wrightson received his promotion to the grade of rruijor, and in the following October he was detailed for duty as Professor of Military Science .inj T.ictic-- .it the Micnii .in L:ricultur,il CoHenc. in which c.ip.icitv he is now serving. H PBBH i ■■■■il s te 7 m I i t Vfe rz-iEiR-ei 1 T i i w Lg mf t ' ijb ' tf i. . 1 7 1 0: ' f ■ liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiimiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii llllllillllillllllllllMllllllllll Uli ' iiiiiiilllllllllllinMlllllllllllllllllillllllllHIIIIIIIII llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll :: Sophomore Competitive Drill ::¥ ' j :L,i 5C- W inner — Company First Regiment V ' ernl ' inc;i:nt V ' arnky David Robilrt Lacey IvAPi A Myi-F. .raine Cafitain First t .leutcnant SeconJ lieutenant -iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiii. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ' ; illllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllUll lllllllllllllllllllllllltlllilllill iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiu Ircshniiin Competitive Drill Winner — Com xiny L. First Regiment Robert Dustin Mansfield Marcus William Link Theodore Livingston S ;holi: Captain First Lieutenant Second Lieutenant Tillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIili I ' t ' till illlllltllllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIII ' The Military Ball I.IEUTFNANT CoLONP.L Ali IN McKiNNON SijcMiKR Ccn. ' ral Chairman Captain Tiiaykr Za(.hariah C.i.ayion Acljulant to the General Chairman Coinrriitfee Chuitriufi Colonel Artiilr Charles Nielson Captain George Walter Nash . Major Searcent Peabody Wild Major Verne Vincent Varney . Captain Milton Pettit Griswolo Captain Jesse George Crownhart Captain Earl Albert Heassler Lieutenant Robert Livingston Rewey Lieutenant John W ' eit: McPherrin Major J Essr- Edwin Sal ' cstad Advisory Chairman Decoralions Arrangements Reception Finance Programs Floor Special Feature Press Mttsic I III )| I ICI KS ' i ' llKMAL illlllltllltllllllllllUlllllinilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMMIMIIMIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIillliniMllllllllllllli I ' ait S02 Ulllllllllllilliii ■tllllllilllllllllf- MlllllllllllllllllllllllUillilllll ' TiininraiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiitiiuiiiUMiiMiiiiiiiiiT; Pagt 103 rtcfl ItlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllDi .IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIC 41v .%i HONOR ROLL •Scahhard ami Blade 1 If-Rblri Hi:nry Brown EmvARD Lancworthy Burwkll Jllian Darst Conover Starr Seix;wick Eaton Carl Montague Gkvers Ralph Anderson Grant Arthur illiam Go i;r joTiN Horatio Helmer Gerald Edward Luebben Timothy Ashbury Pedley HoBART Pliny Roberts Roy George Rom Allison Fenball Hannay 5iroTT I9IS Andrew Jacob Brann John Van Brunt Cox Kenneth Curtiss Raymond CIarl C rams Raymond Maihias Heckman Vernon VVinc. Packard Leopold John Quasigroch Ji ' Na:s Sturges Robi:ris Marcus Luling Baxter I Iobart Edward Bondi Knut Hoex.h Houck Donald C oiEiN Iones GusTAE Heime.r Lindberc Geraijj Shearn McWilliams David Albert Newgomber I Iarold Henry S haier ' HMiiiiriiiiiitiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMMiiiiiiiiiiliiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiilir I ' atr 104 11 IIIIIMIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIItt; iiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiit: Scabbard and Blade I ' i ' liruhJ ill W M..TM;n ( ' isionsin. C ' cm ianv A . umhcT oj Vomt ann-s, 16 l.ivinx A .mKrv. 2 000 UalJcrjlon UaMcr Wild Grttmladc Kniuhl uini Hjun Na h Cnswold Hcasslcr Hicwcr lultlc Rcwcy Slichur Kciwin Niclson Atkins Jonis C:ia ton Bartklt Metiihers in Fuciilry Major Arthur R. Kerwin Thomas Edward Jones Lieutenant William Garrett Atkins Henry August Schuette . c ' M i ' r.« in L ' niicrsity Robert Miller Brewer Marion Armstrong Knight Arthur Charles Nielsen Allen McKinnon Slk iiier Verne Vincenf Varnev Searc ' .ent Peabody Wild W ILLIAM BaLDERSTON John Shepard Barflett Marcus Baxter Thayer Zachariah Cxayion Irving Jones Greknsl de Milton Pettit Griswold Earl Albert Heassler George Walter Nash Harold James Pratt Thomas Westley Tuttle Arihir Oliver Olson Roberi Livingston Rewey nllllllllllllllllUlltliiiii tlMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIimilllllllllllHIIIIMK. Patr iOS iiiniiiiiii; isa .liMllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllililllllllllllllllllll: First Regiment Band y I KING the year 19U -I7 the First Regiment Band established a scries of seven Sunday afternoon concerts, I 1 ITiese proRrams were designed to develop and display the talent in the band and to give members of the band A J experience in public appearance. The series was an uncgualified success. During the first season the paid udmissions numbered nearly H.OOO. ITle Second Winter Series has proved that this scries of concerts has become a permanent Madison institution. Five corKerts have been given. These have been enthusiastically sup ported and this work is now contemplated as a regular part of the work of the band annually. The band has suffered heavily from loss of membership due to having 45 men in active service, but never in the history of the organization has there Ix-cn such an inl1u. of capable high schtxjl graduate players. This has saved the situation for the band. Officers J. E. Saljgstad Major and Conductor R A. Brendel Captain and , ssiilant Conductor li. SI. Jones First Lieutenant arid Manager G. H. Stueder I- ' irit Lieutenant Second Regiment Band R. V ANDERBIE .... Second Lieutenant and Assistant Conductor Second Regiment Band Russell G. Smiley Chief Musician CHEiTER HoiiSLY Princifial Musician J MEs. Peachey I ' irsI Sergeant Personnel Instrumentation According to Desks l iccolo K. G. Kn.AND l-lules Herdekt Glaettli. Principal J.H. Van Vlecjc C, Neumeistek Olm C. A. Hoi ' PEKT Clarinets R. A. Bri.ndi ' .l ( ,, , ... . c , ' Principals W. A. SUMNUI ' R. G. Smiley O. Densdn J. LODERC S. J . MiLLI ' Jt H. Carswi ' Xl M D Jack-son G. W. Lofti ' i ' .i.n V. OSllEA S. Maiuuiau. C. A Demnis C M SWANVIN G. li Moi)«L Cornels and Trumt ets C. L Teetor I „ C HOESLY i l ' ' P ! J D Deihl M. Teetor H. A. Stoi.te H. Bowman D R l.AMONT G. E, HiPKE H TiMM v. MlTTNIiR Horrxs R. B MEYliRs. Principal D Bennett M !■: Griiai I Voi5lMIOUSE I. V. Sl ' ICKARO Baritones J ROIII ' JITN C Cj Cow. don J. A Jame.s II R Bhuck Trombones H H Scott. Prir J. A. Peaotey S. J Seder L QUARIIERC G. E. SiPPt.E J H. Wegener Blisses Gil. Srt ' EUER A. L Simpson D A. CZaI DWELL Wm V. .Arvolp 1 ' . 11 SatRAMM Wm WtXJox Tymfiani R Vandurdib MpalJ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin lllltlllllllllllllllllllllllll ' ' niitiitiiitiiiiinii? ' nitiiiiilllllliiliiiiiiliiliiiilillllilllllliu nllllilllllllUllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMillllllltllllllllllllllllllllMllllllllllllllllllllllllllli I ' atf to: IIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIItllllllll! IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIL Miiihiiiimuiiiiimtiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin - Lo-eds niM JillliiilDlllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIMIIIIIIIIIi Hi Ll.N DliNN . . Mari aret G Ror.nRS Ci.ARA M. Is(;wi;rson AmyC JonsE SitsAN B Ramsay . ) . C. A Officers S lional Slwlc I Stc • I ' reiident TreMurer Cabinet Members ' tis 1 111 1 N P. IllM. Hll IN M CUMM RUIH D NOER Nl. f:i ARA M Im.wekson MaRI.ARETG RtXAMS 1919 Run L Stolie I ' lORENCI: 1 1 KiNi. Viola Pleuss Lui.u K Saul Susan B Ramsay Helen B Smiih 1920 AmyC loiisi Luci l; R Work Cabinet Council U CUE 1 1 Berc; Raoiel B (.I1AI W1 J Kmma (- Damkoemler Myrtle E Jouse Betsey Madison Marion C Nei-rud 1919 Hildac.arde H Mayer Marion C Mayers Gladys M Saim EsTELi.E J Sawyer Esther V Werdcn BeRSICE ALI1R1..HT Sarah K Ashiiy Katherine M Boi l [.ouisi 1. 1-:mer.v)n Mil WED L I--ra:ier Edith Fult: CjRACE C. Goddard Marie E Hiermstad CiERTRUDE M Jacohs Charlotte li Iesh 1920 Eliiabeth R Nysirom luLiA M Post D Jean Patters«Vn W Mildred Pederson Marc.aret B Reinkini. Mary . Rouse Helen 1 1 Skinni Imorenci: Whitbeck R Claire White Harriette Wilson Beatriu- Beal Mari.ahei R Brown Cjjrnei lA V Oiss Dorothy L Danc.ei. Eleanor C KRAiiMisR Katherine E. Lees Helen M. Snyder Esther J Wanni r Emcrvin Saul CruiKhlll Skinner SnyJcr (Uinovcr Sin iiiix n Bciil InRwcrvin M JoI-vsc JikoIw liiiiicr R. UHc A Jol ' isc Holl Mudiv.n l.cuh Ni«:r Wii..d Plcu« Slollc C.uinminK Oiimk.Ktilci l i.«l Hovmd Smilh Wliilc Bell Ncptud l.cci IXinn R■ «cr Kinu I ' litUTMin lullcr Whill-ctk Pcdcr«in MjcrmMaU niiiilillllllllllllllllllllllllllllll ' Ulllllllllllllllllllll! lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll illlllllMMIillllllllllllllllllllli Keystone Kl: ' ' STONE is a society, the membership of which is composed of the presidents of the women ' s organizations in the L ' nivcrsity. Its purpose is to regulate women ' s activities. The society also confers with the [5can of Women upon problems relating to the general welfare of women students. Officers Madelyn Stanchfield President Lucia Clow A i ni hers Incrid Nelson S C, A .VIargia Hinkins Green Button Margaret Rogers Y. W . C. A. Margaret Craighill Red Gauntlet Elsie Howell . W. A A. J EAN Patterson Yellow Tassel Mari Bollman Red Domino Ethel Dummer Blue Dragon Catherine Cl ' Lver Mortar liisird Lucia Clow . C:hadhournc Hazel Branine Glee C:iub Madelyn Stanchfield Barnard Marion Dawson Castalia Edith Fultz Euthenics Club Agnes Skelton Pvthia Hilda Mayer Clef Club Norma Staltffer Agnes Loughlin Twelfth Night Editor Woman s Page of Cardina Elizabeth Kendall Census Chairman George .Avi Nr ' -l v -( h.t . S,„„i , PK, (;,.M,p, „!- I-P,. KS..V. SiCfr:,.;.- 1 .M-u,; Roscrs l)o cll brickaon Ojmmcr StdrKhficId AnundKn Clow LriuRhlin Paticrson lltnkiru niiiiillllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllliilllllllltlllllilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiii|ililiiliiiiiiiiiiilllillllllllilllR Pair III i iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiillllliiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiini iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Womati ' s Equal Suffrufie Leaffiie 300 AL n I: Mh.MliliKS Officers auti ( ' .abinet Gf.rtrude Erickson Pre. idcnt WiNiFRF.D CoRWiN Vice-President Hannah Harrington .... Recording Secretary Marjory Griesser Treasurer Helen Ramsay ... Corresponding Secretary Elsie GlL ' CK Chairman Program Committee Katharine Washblrn Second Program Chairman Lois McDonald . Chairman .Membership Committee Hf-LEN Rice .... Chairman Publicity Committee luuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMininiiiiiiiiMiiiiuiuiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiihiMMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin Put ' II i :li||||||lllllllltllllllilii illltlllllllltli illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllliiilU w Camp Fire Girls Mill lIl tltu n ci| I -imp lire CjirK was founded n 1 ' - I1, the first organization in the University . ' I Wisconsin being established in 1913. Its purpose is to broaden a girl ' s daily life, in order that she may sec in it romance, beauty, and adventure, and in order that the daily drudgery may be made to con- tribute to the joy of living. Its further purpose is to give service and assist patriotic organizations in time of need. Taychopera Mrs Mabel Glaettli Guardian ' lDA CoAPMAN Vice-President Rachel Stearns ... Recorder Marjorie Bartholi- ... Treasurer Walizheda Mrs. Mary Garner Guardiar Mariana Sell Vice-President Viola Pohle Recorder Beth Hart Treasurer Minnetoska Mrs. Gij dys Jerome . . Guardian Helen Batty Recorder Alma Luesses Treasurer Ku hn lVK :n..rih Kinv I iirrmKtim Miller MScll Rindv luvlor (.uImo tjjc N cr IXkitiirJ Cijulcy t lt nch Burtholf Luojcn MoJcmU KrucBcr I Otocn G. Bjorroon M t}jorn ion E Sell E Taylor Whclan Stearm I (ill Clow Nocticl Botow I Olin D Olin Gamer Clocttli Jerome Martin Poull An«ey Davis -llllllllllllllll Illllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll Patt m ' illllllMIIIIIIIIIIUMIinillltllllllllllllll Eiitlwiiics (Jltih ()tfi iTS linmi 1 I.:LT PraiJent Helen I£ I ARKINSON VntPraidenl Garnet taF R . SCHEID . . . . Secretary 1arth Sa(.E Treasurer Members Uradtiatc Ni LLIE McClI RG HIS IeanRich Est ier Anderson KraN(.f:.sEnger Kathirinf Hudson Helf:n Parkinson (jRAci-: Ani erson Mrs Emma England Martha Himphrey Unet Reid Helfin Rici I-Jelen Barker l )ROTHY FlNDORFF Myrti 1 JOBSI Carol Bird Edith Fl lt: Crac. Johnson Martha Sage Haiel Branine l.FONA CiARROW Vfrna Johnson CiARNFITTA SoiEID J EANtTTE BUTLICR 1 Ielen Cronin Esther Cifford Betsfy Madison Myrtle Schnackenbf Mae Cjrof:ndykk Fran IS Martin Hazel Sims Macdalini-; Oonin Mildred Hagerty Hfiln Martin Hannah Smylie Helen CuMMiNi. Wealthy Hall CilNFVII VI MiK.RE Llfiwellyn Stout Dorothy Cam-. Reba Haner NfII IF MOBRISSEY Margaret Stevens Helen Davis Esther Heisu; Hl I )ROIHY I ' AINF Eli:a fth Wilson Bernice Barker Beulah Coon IlORENCL liRAI FJ Mariana Sell Florence Bf-atty Ray Cooley BF_ssn; GuNN GlJMlYS SlVERIN ViEVA BiGELOW Iris Coldwell Mae 1 loRToN Agnes Sturgf s Marcuerite Bironc. Fl ORINrF Danfobth Mildred Hi ssa Elisabi-.th Suthfj ij n Eleanor Bocan IlnnitteDinwiddie Brlta Luther Haiel Wolcott Ida Bollenbeck Mvk.MUr 1 IRRIS Marian Oi.iiRiai Ada Van Stkenblrg Winifred Bruff Ura 1 llNLCAN GlNI AH VL GOLGM I ' ilO Miriam O Neil Adit Aim; Paine Lilian Tasoil Anita Burnam Alice Kirk Gkrtri DK Smith Verna Tucker Carol Coates Gladys Kyte Katherine Stackhoise Annette Walker Florence r-iNNERiD Haiel Leavitt Katherine Stauieer Frances Youn . Mary Fowler KATHiiRiNE Lees 1911 Ellen Tenney Eleanor Siiickert Grace Bemis Rlth Haring l «OTHY JoNIiS Norma Raugh Marc aret Chambers Mildred Hocan Olivia Le Ii woiTLT Frna S-hvi.-t IRIvNE DAHLBFlRr, Harriet Ivi 1 iFi FN Pearson Mills Ssii. • FZtHI-.L GiLDEHAlS Icrri ' i (jwilev Humphrey MjiiJiv n i uckcr Aruicn I l  fmn t nipcr Inucri v ( uitH l.uihcr llurniim I ' cicr Schntwkcnl-tcru hiKcInu, ( iirrMV. I nalnnJ Schcid I ' ultr Porkii Jimo Kttirim Su ut IXjnwiJjic Wr.|o t( Ktcc Sim Jt in - n 1 irtncr ' il in SuthcrlunJ tV.llcnhcck MuNVi HciMft Ruuch lcnnc Miirtin Sirm riMtltlllMtlllMMItHlllllllllltli: ' MIIIIIMIMIIIIIIIMIMinilin llltlinilllllMIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIilMIIIMIIIIIII iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii: Clef Club Officers Hilda Mayer Elinore Sch vei;er Helen Churchill CuARA Mueller Lucille Campbell President ice-Presider t Recording Secretary Corresponding Secretary Treasurer Active Meiul ers Dorothy Beecher .• acot EiORCE Dorothy Dennett Helen Dodd Ri th Donaldson GlDRL N ESTVAD Katharine Fedde Marian Fleming Fannie Keller Winifred Bartholk An-ne Brigcs Florence Finnerld I,ti I IF I rr Elsa Krfaii-.rs Eleanor Kraemi-.r Marjorie McNk rry Lucille Nltter Marion Pilpel Leon A Post Ruth Smith Olive White Madelon Wii.lman Associate Mem hers Maui Mili i:r Mar(.aret Nuzum Addie Pieh Doris Simonson I Mil M Si S( hi II Toldc Willm L cnnctt Krcmcrt KrocmcT Bumc Kclkr IMpcl Bctchcf Mueller Mayer Schwazer Nuncr l- ' lcrnmit CampKrll McMurrv l ' )i ruild- n nlllllllllllllllllMlltllllMIIIIMMI tlllllllll IIIIIIIIMIillillllillliiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiHIIIIIII Patt II f uiiiiiiiiiiiitniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiii Co tisii mors ' Lca ru c Officers Ruth Lucille Siolte ... President MiRLWi CA H. RINI■. O ' Neil Vice-President Genevif.ve Elizabeth Gough Treasurer Myrtle Elvira JonsE ... Secretary Publicity Marion Catherine Neprl d Finance Genevieve Elizabeth Gough Program Martha Skaar Clearing House George Anundsen Executive Committee Memhershif .Miriam Catharine 0 ' . ' eil Social Dorothy Belle Scott White List and Label Esther Werden Extension Dorothy Wheller Dickerson The Consumers League of the Univer,sity of Wisconsin was organized as a branch league of the National Consumers ' League in 1909. The aim of the National Consumers League is to abolish child labor, unsafe and insanitary work places, long hours for workers, and the sweat shop system The purpose of the University Consumer ' s League is primarily to awaken interest in the Na- tional Lcague.and to educate the students to the need of buying labeled goods. r. ilr:-. iu ' - Hj rs Md. ;y i%1 SJ Am wB v ■h ikv .. f r WcrJcn iitiiiMiiiiitriiiriiiitiiiMiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiH Pair ilb :uiiiiiiiiii IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Womcirs (Jontmercc Club The Women ' s Commerce Club was organized March 7. 1917. The purpose of the association is to encourage women to enter the commerce course and to bring them in closer touch with each other and with the acti ities of the business world. It is the first organization of its kind to bn established in anv university in the country. Officers Helen Haessler Irene Hart Florence Wechesser Alma Pett President icf-Presidt-nl Treasurer Secretary Gertrude Haessler Helen Haessler Rebecca Horner Kathrvn Lambrecht Gtj DYS Pasewalk Elizabeth Anderson Orpha Coe Katherine Hanley Irene Hensey Laiir Hunting Nina Blakefield Irene Dam Ruth Estnad June Gray NlARf.lERITK HlINS I I SSII I ll F I l N Members 1919 1920 Florence Wechesser 1921 Irene flART Cecilia Lins Florence Rl ndell Pearl Sanderson Helene Thomas Irma Lancdon Grace McRae Anna Noiil Alma Pett Sarah Lolise Proc;ior Elizabeth Paulus Helen Roth Carolyn Stat: Dawnine Wheeler .Anna Wilkinson I III ni . Ri iF ' ri RMA :illiMliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiuiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii(iiiiilllilllliliiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiir ■•! ' Pat ' II ; k :ilUlliIIIIMIIIMll!,ii iiiiillllllllllllllliiliiihiiuiuiiiillllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllliiiui - Green Button MaRi I A 1 llXKINS . TiiF.LMA Johnson Annie Laurie Horde I Ielen Conway President ice-President Treasurer Secretarv Since the founding ol the fir t Green Button society in the Freshman class of 1912, similar organizations for women have been a part of the life of each class. A sp ecial inno ation of this year was the Red Cross work done by the girls. Spreads and social gatherings united the mem- bers of Green Button. Rod Gcniutlct idwri Margaret CRAlfiiliLL President Marii; WiLcoxoN ' ict -President ILuzMium Candee Secretary Dorothy Haessler Treasurer Marii W ' ilco.xon . Cheer-Leader Red Gauntlet has centered its interest upon war work this year, and in this way has also pro- moted a greater feeling of unity among its members. It was among the first to have a special day at the I ed Ooss r x m. This has been supported unusually well, and a great many of the class pledged themselves to sptnd some time every week at work there. Besides this, Red Gauntlet bcjught a Liberty Bond which was donated to the Y. M. C. . War Fund. MIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIinilllllllllltlllllltllllllllllllllMllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltllltti: tltlli Pan lit :illlllilliillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltlllllllltlllllllllllllltllllllllll!llllllllllllli.ii.:iiniiiiiiliiiiiHiiiiiiiiiilliil ' -. Yellow Tassel Ycllo - Tassel, the junior women ' s or ;ini:.ition, founded by the class of 1916, has promoted a spirit of good will and interest among the girls. It has succeeded in carrying out the Junior .• d isory System, and has entertained the Freshman advisees. Since the United States entered the war. Yellow Tassel has done its part by adopting Friday as all-junior Red Cross Day. Je n Patterson President Winifred Bartholf ' icc-President Genevieve Gol ' c.h Secretary Lillian Lewis Treasurer Velma Reid Cheer-Leader Lucy W ' allrich Chairman Advisory Committee Blue Dragon nmui The present Blue Dragon society, the organization for senior women, is the third associa- tion to be formed under that name .Ethel S. IXtmmer Sarah A. Spensley Marion L. Clancy Dorothy E. Reid President Vice-President y ' secretary Treasurer lllllllllllllllltlllMIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIl Pag 319 u I UIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII: MIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIilllll niiiliiilllllltilllllllllllllllllliT . ' iniiniiiiiiiiiiiii IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII -%r y y- Z- ' Bucking or an Ei ' ACTIVITIES TiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiitiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiintiiiiiiiiiii ' ■- ' ' iiiliiiitinnmiiiim.mimriiiiiiiiiiiiiiii MARCH j. I9IS Worn an s P ' IIIIIIMIIII||IM„l|||||,„„„„p THKDAII Y CARDINAI. ag e Ku. ' -•  - 1-™. A, ' - WeVe on Our Honor! , W. J. s. BRING IN U4 m ' - ' • - .„„ ,„ „i FIRST WEEK OF CAMPAIGN :::.-E::- l2:.;-i M[|| Of fiUSSIll i ' „, ' '  .„i, ' i7°,; °J Ps ' J ' ] ' ' ' ' ' ' ■ ' «f «s '  f Than Repre- ■• ' ' • ' i! i ' , ' , ' , ' ' ' i!!! ' ' 1 ' ' s  • ITwir s«« m ■uii n ' ! loJ ft ' «  « ' •) ' Country LAND SYSTEM OF COUNTRY RESPONSIBLE FOR WEAKNESS 1917.1S Daily • . Fade StaU OR SPORTS PEOVE POPULAB ITALIAN Ol Hd TT ' — ' — ' ™ JFirjl Da, u-der Ntw System Of BAND CONCERT SUNDAY l fB,ANCE IN NEED PUN PRESENTATION- OF ' ° ° ' ' .,. oZZZ., , . . OF PHONE GIRLS iversity honor roll ' ' Ruency in French ConvcrulionH. J, -i ;„ ' , ,;;;, ' , ' „;, ' ■ ' • ' -l mi ruX ' i • U Mam RequfSile For Ap- Lirji . ' , ••■ ' •.j; ' i ;. ' i % ' A , ' ' • ' ' ' t! ' S FRESHMEN HOLD VESPERS SUNDAY : Service Rag ol the Freih- wi to Be Topic of Meeling ' Jl ' ,„ s . ..• ' i;: ' ; ' I- T ' ' -£•• ' ■ J ' ooo ■■i war ... ;cr;:s.::r,r ' ;. . wu. ' ' :,:- . :„ .K i;£l ' !i ' ' ' s are paid, ' 7-. ' £-J«Jfs. ii;; • - ' - - Lead Women in Paying Up IXi ' , ' .[ ' , ■■- ' •i ' o Y.  . C. A. Pledget m.T.rJi ' V:; ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' • Promptly !, ' . .? ' ' ' - • ■-- ' .VtiT, USE WAR GARDEN JJ j. i. i . ' . ' 4 ! ' ,LY fUESHMAN OAJICE WIU K wis ; ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' - ' ' 8 ' £VEWT OF 1921 CtASS EXHIBIT SHOWS HOW TO RAISE :ir:r;.. - r-— «« — i r  iwiui r r ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' •• ' • ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' •• ' ' ' ' ' ' • ' • ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' • ' ' ' ' H...n............nM,,„m,,.M...,.,„ Pai Ji2 iiiilllllllli-; :: lllllillllllllMMIIiilllllllllllllllllllllMlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllliMllllllillllliinMlllllliiillllllMllllllliL Ill iinilllttlltlllllllllllllltlllllMllllllllllllllllllltllll V C t Vt jjf 7 T V N T : Wf .liliilliiitiiiillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMliMlllllllllltMllllllllllllltllllllllllllltltllllllllllllllltllllllllllllMtlllMllllllllllr: Pot ' f24 Jlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllt llllilllllllltMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII ' - illllllllllllllllllllllMIMIIIIIIIIIilllllllllllllllllllllllMIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIillllillllllllllllllln illliiilllllllllllllllllllllltlllMllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllltlllt; ChadbDunw Hull Officers = UUCKA Cl ow .... Pre. i,lenl . Margaret Schl ' lt: Vice-Prtstder,i Mll.DRKD SlNCl.MM Srcrrtary S Sarah Ox.omm ' . . Treasurer — Jani-: Sai.isihihy . Lthrariarx — Ldcy WAi.iRiai Sxiat Chairman E Mamii-: f L-soN I ' tre Caf ain n RuTM Barr Keeper cl the Archti ' ei .■Utititns of I  I7 IS = Srrt 2 ' — Miitincc Dance for ihc Ni I .irlv I . I -I ' ony for School Children Z Oct 8-( J.rridor SprcuJs .Inn 1 1— Annuiil IJiincc Oct IO-l(. Inilnili..n Week lelv tv— I ' lniil rreshmiin Iniliation r ( cl 12 — Peunul IltiK Ku h l-ch 22 — I ' ndercliissnicn Puny — Nov 27 — ul k KlVlnK P«rt Miir U — Informiil Dunce l c 8 -Infornwl Diinte Mar 18 -Si Piitrick Cjilviret E l cc II— Silcnl NiRhl Miir II— liiiMerliRullunl E I5ec. 18—  n tmji% l ori% ' Mny li — Senior Swmis Out E iiitiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiilliiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiltliiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiniiiiilliliiliiiiiiiiilililtlliintnr - llllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllli lllllinilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMlllllillllHlllllllltlllMIIIIIMIIIIIIIU Ihinuirci Hull Madelyn SrANCHFiELD President Florence Graper Secretary .VIlRlAM O ' Neil Treasurer V ' elma Reid Social Chairman Leona Post Music Chairman Katherine Lees librarian Emma Damkoehlep. .V (. ' A. Rettresentatitv my JoBSE . . I ' ire Chief Scf)t. 2 ' - — Freshman Iniliacion Mar. 2 — Frct-hmcn [dinner Dance Oct. 13 — Sophomore Party for Freshmen Mar. J I — Easter Egg Hunt N ' ov. 2 — Homecoming Tea April 1 — Junior April Fool Party Nov. 17 — Chadboume-Eiarnard Party April 17 — Mothers Week End Feb. I -I — Valentine Party pril 18— Barnard Vaudeville Feb. 22 — Washington Birthday Eianquct . pril 27 — Faculiv Reception June 1 — Senior Swing-Out ' .lllllllllllllllllillll iiiliiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiMiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiii M ' tiMiiiiiiiiiiiititiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiKiiiiniiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiii . uiiiMMiiiiiiiMlMliilllllllllllllllllllillllllimniiiiiilliiitiiiiiinilllllllHlllllllllllllllllllii ' WISCONSIN IN WAR. TIME □ Ea 3f lELJTENANT (.OKPY Rl l-M.. IV of W 18. is M wcarinc the complctr cqiiipincnt now furnished every L ' nitcd States oftkcr who is finhtinfi in ihc first lirK trcnche? Note the pack and canteen, the officer 5 pistol, the aas ma .k hanging in its case over the left shoulder. orKJ the new American helmet The greruide is shown in its position lust before leaving the hand r Ensic.n R. Johnson. 17. U. S. N. R. F C. is shown with one of the many hydroplanes which have completed the patrol between Havana, Key West, and Miami. Paul Meyers, all-conference end in 1 ! 5 and captain of the 1916 Varsity football team, was one of the first Wisconsin men to join the Ameri- can forces on the west front as a flyer. COME. YOU SEVEN ' ' Shooting crap i u pleosant but tumc pastime for birdmcn For two months these college boyv, members of the Ist L ' S Aero 5 :)uadron, made this hut their hendqutirtrrs Somewhere in France. ' from left; is un interested onlooker. Paul Meyers (fourth This defective 220 mm. shell — the only large shell which found its mark when the Germans bombarded the Rhcims Cathedral — entered the roof through the hole seen at the extreme top of the right hand picture It was one of the miracles of war that it did not explode. As it was. it went through the stone floor and tore a hole twenty feet deep and ten feet in diameter. t A FRENCH MILITARY ROAD Cam mcnts .1 in the I ' for the cncmv to distinguish any move- tat height. Robert Osborne, ' 19, is seen CARMAN SMITH, 1917 TRACK TEAM CAPTAIN W ith the greatest (jai.jxv oi tracK stars gathered at Wisconsin the west had ever seen, and with the conference track meet but a few weeks off, faculty action abolished all athletics shortly after war was declared. Practically the entire track team enlisted. Carman Smith, captain (on the left), who joined the U. S. Marines, is seen (on the right) seated on a coral reef near San Domingo. A HASTY dip into Wisconsin athletic history reveals the fact that Eber Simf son ' s record as a three-sport man has never been ex- celled and that his distinction of winning seven W ' s in three years has never been equalled. Three W ' s in football and two each in basket ball and base ball establish an eminent record for one of Wisconsin ' s greatest athletes. Eber Simpson i i ' Houu BoNui on Falitui Duty MnJum Ou i i),Ul ' Prepare lo Mourxli. J A THrRD Line Dugout French Coup de N4ain Squad Passing Through a Village —  French Observation Balloon or Sausage ■{-Rii:s ■ Gi ' .wL Church Riins lo rm Rill IMS Laiiildkal DAD ' MORGAN A cheery smile and a nod for all. But behind that smile lies the true generosity and whole-hearted kindness that make him what he !■; m nil Visconsin men — just Dad. ' Mnny n fellow ' brother is mivslnR from the fireside — perhaps forever The call to the colors wun un wercd by hundreds — the ch jiccst o( Wisconsin ' s rruinhotjd. I k y ' i J-V ' - .- • ■•■ aPI . -.kl Biuliii l liib ' ' 9 x i JdB STATE CAPITOL ON PROM NIGHT, 1917 The pomp, magnificence and luster of a Wisconsin Prom is no more, for war turned out the bright lights of college life and the far-famed Promenade is dead But think of the Prom when the boys come back! Ain ' t it a grand and glorious feeling! Tua.t in cotUge whtre I mtl her, She knti thu army su ater ' ' -Ar on rr ous . So runs « little strain — and the girl ' arc doing ihcir bit to gladden the heart of the Sammy lad in this direction Captain James H. Walton, formerly associate professor of chemistry, is now officer in charge of gas defense training in all the cantonments in the United States. Arlie Schardt, 17. the best miler Wis- consin ever had and holder of the record in that event, was the first university training camp officer to be wounded in action. He was fighting in the Toul sector. Arlie Mucks, U S representative to the Olympic games in 1912. and incidentally holder of the world ' s record in the discus and two national ric ' irds in the .•.hot-put and discus, answered the Food Administration ' s call h K ' linR on a farm liist spring The camera-man caught him while cul- li Hiing corn with his Ford tractor. A woman high jump ' Never, you say But out at Camp Randall they really do it. Mary Fowler is here seen clearing the bar at 4 feet. Miss Fowler is at present holder of the W. A. A. record in this event with a jump of 4 ft. 4 3 in. A Rr.. L farmi:ri:-s In April. 1917, in answer to the Food Administrations call for greater production. Elizabeth Kendall, then a lunior in the College of Agriculture, withdrew from the I ' mvcrsity tn take cnarpc of her furm in lllirK is. C n the farm she plowed, pulvcnrcd and harrowed sixteen acres, which .she planted to com. Besides this she harrowed HO acres of additional corn land and cut and marketed two acres of asptaragus tJROBABLY no woman at Wisconsin Ja has more directly served her country than has Miss Nlarlatt. Early last June she was called to Washington by Herbert Hoover, where she performed the gigantic task of organizing all Home Economics departments throughout the United States on a war basis of service. Much of the most powerful national Food Will Win the War publicity is from her pen. She has delivered literally hundreds of lectures to the women of Wisconsin on Food Conservation In addition to her work in the university she is serving as the chairman of Women ' s Food Production and Conservation on the State Council of Defense. : lU ' . I .MaRL.MT War Time Recipes is the title of this excellent cook book, which was prepared for housewives who wish to save wheat, meat and sugar for the boys Over There liestdcs scllinK 4,000 recipe bfxiks and appropriating the profits to war work, the Women s War Work ( ' ountil committee, with Miss Helen M Dovis us chairman, has directed the women of the L niversiiy into u spirit o( sincere sacrifice. JgL ' NDREDS of Daily Cardinals jH books, magazines, and miniature Lifts. collected and sent tn ir.iinini; camps throughout the United States by the Y. W. C. A. Emergency Board, of which Miss Smith is chairman, have helped many a soldier pass a happ hour. HiLEN B. Smith W Kuight Sir, 000 wiirth (if I nind Sliiti- dovcrnmint f ind ' - tif t he Second Liberty Loan, and are waiting for our quota on the issues which are to follow. This was the reply of Wisconsin ' s women to Katscrism. Miss Alice R. Van Hisc who conducted the sale among the women, is seen at the desk fium which the drive was directed. THE RED CROSS -SHOP ' IN LA I HROP HALL The University of Wisconsin group of the Red Cross is one of the most serviceable and efficient organizations of its kind in any university in the country. The women of Wisconsin have more than done their share in serving the national Red Cross. A count made during one week places the number of contagious masks made at 72; bandages. 850; 9 x 9 compresses, bOO; 4x8 compresses. 260; p a jamas, 5; hospital shirts, 15. HiLKN P. Bull Dirrilor oj Red Cross U ' l ' f k m ihe ( niirr.ii ■ H. ' :Am A FLYINU lACKLb Simpson, who has just intercepted a forward pass, is stopped in his tracks by a Minnesota player. It was Eber ' s own brilliant forward passing in this game that defeated the Gophers, 10 to 7. i , ' • T. -PrtiUtat CkurUi H. Ida Hut. ' •. ufw; ciiju cd icciim the UuJ(j ' r machine trample the Gophers any more than did Prcxy. AWCiLNDED Prussian, who has been carried to this station on the Verdun sector, is being placed in an American ambulance which is about to leave for a hospital. j IEUTENANT E. L. HAHN. ' 18, is llj seen with his airplane just before he undertook a cross-country flight from Kelly Field, San Antonio, which nearly cost him his life. A thirty-five- mile gale dashed his machine to earth, and as a result of his injuries he was confined to the hospital for two months. ( ,.rx ,.,. : r,.. ■■ , , ., Jasa Y ( A m-ii. ■ • ■,.;■.•• camp in licrliii until thi. L iiiitd States declared  .ir mi (.ii.rm.iin. vklKti he was ordered out by the Imperial government. He left immediately for Moscow, Russia, where he is now scrMng as assistant director of American army work of the International Y M. C A. The picture shows him on the front porch of the first Russian armv Y M C A . or .Soldatski Cilub ' Note the typical Ru-vsiun architecture, the .American (lag and the red triangle. ■ r THE MAIN WIRELESS STATION r rHE University of Wisconsin radio labora- Lii torv is the onlv universitv lab ' in the 7i[ ' yt tory is the only university country which is permitted to manufacture the important pliotron bulb which is a funda- mental part of every high powered wireless out- fit. Professor Terry, director of the course in wireless, is exhausting the air from a pliotron bulb. Nlany wireless students, after enlistment, have been assigned to government schools for further instruction, and in time will see actual service as operators. M Terry RADIO CLAil as The only Chr d by Nelson B. Tan, U. of W. 18, the only states holding a commission in the R. O, T, . I win- a .nk thl unu ' -ual unit devotes an evening to military drill and the study of preparedness measures, with striking results. By rank from left to right: Captain Nelson B. Tan, 18, Canton, command- ing; J. Wong, ' 21, Canton; C. J. Waung, ' 20, Soochow; M H. Chow, 19, Ningpo; W. P. Liang, 18, Canton; K. S. Chu, 19, Ningpo; H. H. Hsieh. 19. Wiisih; C T. Chiang, ' 20, Shanghai. E. CHAMBERL.MN (center, nr t 1 conceived the idea of a fat test for milk. He came to Dean W. A. Henry (on the left) of the Wisconsin Experiment Station for help in perfecting the idea. Both turned to Dr. Babcock. the scientist, to work out the details in a practical way. Dr. Stephen Moulton Babcock will live forever as one of the greatest benefactors the world has ever known iLonov and Llass .V)cicLies lillllMMIIIIIIIIIIIU. iitliliillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli: Phi lictii Kappa MliMUliKS IN I-AC.L L 11 C.harlc5 Elmer Alien. Ph D Florence Uli:u Allen. Ph D Kiithannc Allen. Ph D AlKn W Arom. Ph D l-redo Mune liachmann. Ph D Lclm 15a- ..m. Ml. Kdviurd Aviihel liirue. Ph D . Sc D . 1.1- D W illarJ C;rosverv.r Blever. Ph D Charles Henrv Buminn. Ph D 1 lorace I homas BurRcss. Ph D William B (.airns. Ph D [ImcM Barrel Chamberlain. M . BD CeorRc Carv Cj mstc)ck. Sc D . LLD Percy Millard Dawson. M D RoUrt lilkin Neil l d({e. A M William Henrv Dudley. B A Richard nicodore Klv. Ph D . IXD Adolphine Bianca Ernst. Ph D Cjirl Russell I ' lsh. Ph D GcorKe fiinverse l-iske. Ph D Alexander G Filc.M A .B A .Oxi.r .Ml-crl St.mell liim. A M Cordon Scott 1-ulcher. Ph D Charles Josiah Cialpin. A M lidward I lall (.Gardner. M A l.ucv MarieCav. BL John l.euisCiHin. PhD Allred Paul Haake. B A Waller W i|s, n Hart. A B Lee M Hollander. PhD I ' rank (iavlord Huhhard. Ph D C.rant Milnor H de. M A Leonard Rose Ingersoll. Ph D Joseph Jasirow. Ph D MLMBLRS IN lACHLII 1 Olll s Kahlcnherft. Ph D Will amjac ,b Keller. Ph D Louis ■Cind. Ph n mers. Ph D Hen V Burr nes Lathrop. .A B ( ha les Ker neth I.eilh. Ph D Will am Kll rv Leonard. Ph D Arthur Solo mon Loevcnhart. M D I-rcx crick . le. andcr Manchester PhD Herman William March. Ph D Lois Kimball Mathews. Ph D Waller Joseph Meek. PhD H L Miller. B A Bavard Quincv Morjwn. Ph D 1-rederick .Vustin OiU!. Ph D Julius Lmil Olson. B A Ma.x Charles Otto. Ph D Irederick Logan Paxson. Ph D William Harold Peterson. Ph D .Anna Marie Pitman. Ph D MLMBKRS IN I ' .ACLL 1 Y James I ' rancis .August in Pyre. PhD Prank Otis Reed. Ph D Harrv Sanger Richards. LL D Predcrick William R. . Ph D |-;dwin Carl l.othar Clemens Rocd der. I ' h D i;dward Alsworth Ross. Ph D Harrv Luman Russell. Ph D Trances V. Sabin. N A William Amasa Scott. 1 D Gi-orge Cla.k Sellerv. Ph D l-rank Chapman Sharp. Ph D Grant Showerman. Ph D Moses Stephen Slaughter. Ph D C:halrcs Sumner Slichter. M S Charles Augustus Smith, M A l-:ii:abcth Anita Smith, Ph D Howard Leslie Smilh. 1 L B Hugh Allison Smith. M A Walter McMvnn Smith. B A Pearl Mabrv Smith. M A Susan .Adelaide Sterling. M I- William lidward lottingh; W H. Twenhofel. Ph D Charles Richard Van llis LL D Edward Burr Van Vkxk. Ph D ieorge Wagner. l .A ' ■ D WalUi . MS Ph D . . W M A rs..n W att Oliver Paltersim Watts. Ph D William Linn Wesurmann. Ph D Irank lirnesl Williams. M A Alexander Ncwt.m W inchell. Ph D Morton Owen W ithev. C H 1 ouis Bernard Wolfenson. Ph D Karl Young. Ph D CLASS Ol I ' ll 8 Eircled as Juniars Dorothy M Bell Lucilc H Berg Helen Bucll Kathryn M Cieige Rolf r Johane. ' in Majone Kmnan Armand J ( uick l .rolhv !•; Reid Herlsert W 5x.hmitr Mildred Sprague Mrs A !•: R Blancha Man H Bollman Bculah M B-.wden l.cRov I Burlingiime Lucia li Clow Lslher A ( Jillins jevsiea B Ciolvin Marion L l aws in lilhel S l immcr RoMi lelslicr Annie B lildlcv Dons M GtKidland Marvin C Cjtiul Cecil I lolman C. MglMrrl Josephst n Theresji Nl Klcinhein l;ve 1 Km.wcr Margaret R Kn-iwltn KlmcrO Kracmer Lisa Krcmer Cecilia M l-in Meade M Morris Plciinor Murphy Ingrid C Ncivm Mrs Margaret N Picket i Mary 1 Roudebusch l-lliraK-th Royce Allen M Slichter Ruth 1. Slolte t)lga C IhompMin Alberta M litus Incr U Upgrcn Katharine C WiishlHjrii CLASS Ol- I ' ll ' i Ulnlr l a. Junior James A iHiugh llan.ldM Gnives Gertrude M Jacobs Carl Leinm-Marugg I lelcn B Smith Mnrgiirel B Sperry niliiilllllilllllllHlltiMiilin iiiiiiii iliiiiMiiiiiiiiiinMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir l!lltllllllllillllllllirilllll: iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniriiiiiir- Hon )rury LinHinccnnB Initcrnity Tail Hctii Pi i i ' Roberts Nachun Kmtk-r Peter F. Hopkins Edward Bennett Ml ' rRtW C. Beebe Robert C. Disque Fr nk a. Kartak Leslie E. A. Kelso John G. Glaettli. Jr. Otto L. Kowalke Edward R. Malrer Camlm Fuller S luM.Jt Coll Morse MciiiIu ' i.s in t ' tniiltv James D. Piiii lips John R. Price HalstenJ. Thorkelson Leslie F. Van Hacen James V. Watson Cuwton N. Ward Morton O. Withey Daniel W. Mead John G. Callan Jdhn a i wi in Members in University Ray E. Behrens Lloyd L. C, ll William J. Camlin Howard H. Fuller Carl F. Kotiler Ernest B. Morse Walter S. Nathan Jay E. Newton Arthur C. Nielsen J. Frank Roberts Pai L 1 I. S.hmidt ' ■■ ■ ■  ■ iiiii imuiiiiiiii iiiiiMiii tiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii r.,t ' H ' Illilllllltllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllll Millllllllllillllllllllllllltlllt):: Munorury Aitncullurul l-rulcrnny A Ipha Zeta r- ' oundiJ at Ohio .Stale i niivrw y, IS97 W ( sn n.vin Chafiti ' r, liahcock, 190) . umbiT of Chat tcrs, 24 Iff %,% T% Members in Faculty auf.xandkr septimus alexander Stephen Moulton Bawock gusiav bohsvedt John William Brann Edmono Joseph Delwk he Edward Holyoke Farrincton James Gareield Filler Lawrence Frederick Graber Edwin Bret Hart Edward George Hastings George Calvin Hlmphrey John Ambrose James Edward Richard Jones Lewis Ralph Jones Wesley [■)enver Juday Arthir Henry Kuhlman Donald F. NlArrsoN OlTO Rl INH Jami:s Gareield Milw ard James Gareield Moore Ransom A Moore Frank Baron Morrison George Byron Moriimer George Frederick Potter CJRiiiTiii Rkhards Harry Lgman Ri ssell Harry Steenbock Henry Charles Taylor John 1-awless Tormey Emil Triog Richard Eni;lish ' al ' .han John (tiarles Walker 1 Iari ow Leslie Walshr W iLi ' ERi Walter Weir Andrew Robinson Whiison Zl-ASMAN Members in University I li ' Go W Albert: CJharles C Br ce Donald C. Caldwell Deane Ci. Davis Ned R. Ellis Marion (, Ford Edwin A. I Iammen CXARENCE I. HeNDRK.KSON Roland M. Be hike Paul A. Eke 9 .V C ' arl Q. Harris Orlando O. I Iori ami DWIGIIT ( . Kl NNARD Elmer M Nixson I ' racy R Shane Hiic;o H. S immi;r Sear(;eni p. Wild Mil ION C. Zellmer Wii lard L Dayton Thomas W. Tuttle otltlHlllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllli illlllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMMIIII-: iiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiii IIMIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII) t norury Chcmicul Irutcrnity Phi Lambda Upsilon Founded at Illinois, IS ' 9 isconsin. Beta. IWZ Mcnihcis in Faculty Stephen M. Babcock Harold C. Bradley Edward B. Hart Louis Kahlenberc Otto L. Kowalke Francis C. Kr uskopf Edward Kremers Victor Lenher F. B. Morrison John L. Sammis Harry Steenbock Emil Truog Henry A. Schuette Mettiher.i in I ' niwrsity (irudiiares Olav Houcen Clinton Klevenger John Montgomery John H. Black Erwin C. Brenner G. Manly Cole Ned R. Ellis E.David Fahlherc Marion C. Ford Ralph Friess C. N. B. HAriLEBFHr. 191S M. Starr Nichols Walter Pit: Elmer L. Sevringhaus Carl F. Hayden Philip J. Hickey Elmer O. Kraemer Armand J, Quick Elmer M. Nelson Hugo H. Sommers Richard Storer J. Wesley Williams Roland M. Bethke Harold C. Cheetham Br.RTRAM Heliaer Prfslev O. Holmes CIaKI a ( loPPtRT Tiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil iiillllllllllllllllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIilllllll Honorury IntcrcollcBiuti; IXhuItrv rrutcrnily Delta Si rt?m Rho Wimher cf Cha lcrs. SO Living Members, 2.4 isconsm Cha Ur. I Ot ' Mciiihvr.s iti h ' acttlry Alfred Paul 1 Iaaki: Arnold Bi NNi.Tr Hall Jami s Milton O ' Neill Jamis Franc is Ak.i stini- Pvrl .(ill Sctiool Nathaniel Pail Bl rt. 15 John Gross Jr. ' 18 Mcnihci a Gly Black [ ;wiTT Angl ' s Boyer Francis Delmar Higson W II I I M Si MI ' I E Ia I ADDEN IsADOR William Mi ndi i onN Robert Leroy Peters MiLo Kendall Swanton Pai 1. 5v iiLsiER Taylor 1 Ierman Aim;Ri Zischkn Pan ID ' . W Bi cKW I in Leroy James Birlincame Ray Saneord I-Iralndson Ray Maiiiias I li ( kman 1 IaROLD FvERI I I KiNNE Sira .i;nt Pe.ahody Wild 1919 F ' rANK Will IAM (iiiSl.ROSE I IvRiii D M RiiN Groves ilMIIIIMIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Mlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllir iilllllllllllllllltlllllli: iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiit: MorHirury Commerce l riiternily Beta Gamma Sif ma Gardner Kucchcnmci tL-r Gilman Holman Llwclt Trumbowcr Mitiihirs in Fiiiiilry William Amasa Scott Fayktte Herbert Elwell Stephen Warren Gilman Henry Roscoe Trumbower Hir.o Klechenmeisier Edward Hall Gardner .Mvtrihi ' rs iu Iriiwrsity Stanley Leslie Balmer Max Benard Belsky Frank X ' ictor Birch Marvin Clifford Goul Cecil Lloyd Holman Clarence Ecbkrt Josephson Marvin Stephen Kinc; Donald William McGinnis Armin Daniel Sciiult: Edwin Aldons Moffett Harhi.d Parker Weeks Cordon Dale Adams Walter Ernst Ial:ahn Albert Jldson Steelman Ri ssELL Glen Smiley -llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIUIIiin I ' att If I M ' I ' lMlillllMIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIKIIIIIi lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll ' Honorary Medical I ' ralcrnily Sijrmii Si rnia . tcnil ers in the Fuitilty Charles R. Bardeen Charles H. Bunting Harold C. Bradley Paul F. Clark Percy M. Dawson Joseph S. Evans J. A. E. Eysier Horace Greely Arthur S. Loevenuart Julian Y. ' _Malone Walter J . Meek William S. Miller John X Neumann John L. Reichert Lawrence L. Richdorf F. C, RiNKER Benj. H. Schlomovitz R. ' an Val:ah Metnhcis in the I iiixersity (irailiKil, Fred Carter |i ii L. Ri i hi ri Jlilian Y. Malone Lawrince 1. Richdorf John X. Nei ' mann Richard W. Te I.inde Norton J . E t. rs ill r m i R Lam . i a i i r Frank C. Kinsman Mark L Ryan ll RHI RI W. S HMI i: Jami-:s a. Evans James A Goik.h Gi:OR -.E H. I lOYER 1 Urry E Kami n W II m n I I Rri III .) } Edwin F. Jxhnieders Carl C. Searl Willard M Sonnenberc. James J Swi:ndson II I lAM J . X ' anDenBerc. HiillillllMliltlllllllllllllllltMlllllllllllltlir IIIIIIIIIIIHIMIIIIIIIIII iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilliiiiiiiMliiillin :jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii IIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIl: lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll ' - Horvirury lilcctncal [{nuintcrinn Trdlc Etii Kijppn ti u!, l al Ih.- i nivi-rsils .. Ilhiuu. . ( ' ■• U , v.vnAin. Thcla. f- IO -i.Kin Kctllcr S.lincnl. nllv Ml. c Cull Mctrihirs in Fiuiilty Ml RRAY C. Beebe Edward Bknnett Fran: A Kartak Lloyd L. Call John M. Connolly Raymond C. Grams Harry R. Heintzen Clem Kalvelage Carl F. Kottler David J Bi.attner WALTER E. BlOWNEY Grant R. Wells 1918 1919 Ernest O. Lance John R. Price James W. Watson Allan C. McCl ' LLoi ' i.h Ernest B. Morse Arthl ' r C. Nielsen Clarence A. Pottinc.er Claire L. Schneider Lawrence F. Seybold Tower W. Kim. Lawrence P. Works . n lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllltlllllllllllllllllllMIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIillllllllllllllllllllllllllllUIIIUIUIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlR f ' af if) MiiiHMiiinniiniiMiiiiiiiiniiMiiiiMiiiiiiiiiwni: Hitnofiiry Journuli tic Society Theta Sifrnui Phi Founded at the Lniversily oj a.shinglon, I90S Wisconsin Chattier. Beta. Established 1910 Officers GliOI«.E Anl ' ndsi-n Sarah A. Si ' tNSLi v KaTHKRINU Pai.I WlMII SII)1£ Marjoril Hi;ndric.ks Rum Sirommf. .... ' |R(.INIA Tl NI.R .... I a . Ki;i( HAM .... President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Historian Keeper of Archives Grand Vice-President Honorary Members II i.ARD Gr )s t; or Bli-.vi i Mrs. .XruKRiiNr; WomARn Moore LiD.SA FliRHER ElLA W ' hF.P.LFR W ll.COX Zona Gale Honore Wii.i.sic ■ .Uf n ' Mciiihers Craduate K. Bl RM( 1 SrFWARI Gf.orce Anl ' noskn lMOr;ENE BURCII ESTIU-R FORHF-.S MaRJORIF. I IliNORIfKS IVA ' . Kf:T( MAM iNCRin fI SON DOROIHV 5xOTI Sarah .A. Spi;nslev Norma Stauffer Rum SiROMMi; VlRCIMA Tl.NFR Kaimi RIM Pa(.i WiiiirsinE UiUmillllllllllllliiiMilMtllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllMIIIIIK: .iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii; 5 Ulllllllllllll iiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiirj Honorur Juurtiali tic l- rntcrnay Si :mii Deitci Chi I ' owiJijJ at Dc Pauii Lninnily. 1909 Wisconsin, lota, 1911 Mciiihfis in Fiuiilty WlLLVRD GrOSVEN ' OR BlLVLK C RL Rlssell Fish Andrew Winkle Hopkins LiKANi MiLNOR Hyde Elwood Richards McIntyre William Allison Slmner MemhiTS in I ' tiiversity Craduatv Blaib Converse Frank ' . Birch I9IS G. Earl Wallis Roger Wolcott Paul F. Cranefield William E. Drips 1919 Robert T. Herz Lawrence C. Meyer Harry H. Scott Harold A. Gill 1920 Owi.N L. Scot r nilllllllllllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllllltlMIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIItlUIIIIIIMIIIIIIIi; Pat. JM M ' iiiiiiiiiillllllliiiiiillilllllilliiiiiiiiiiiiiin illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllL Hunorurv licnomicv Knitc A rtiis Chapter Roll i ' isconsin I Lin or d Lnncrsily o Denver W ashinglon University oj Si. Louts HotiDrary . ti tnbers Prop. John R. Commons Prok. Rkhard T. Ely Proi- T. K. Urdahl Crailtiiire Menihcrs in I.inv School I Iarry M. Lanoli ' Rom ri L. Peters Clarence F. W ' mii-fi.n Active Members RoHERI 1. liARt.l.R Ovin n. Bi IX Marius T. Casey Keats S. Chu V. S GlLHREAllI lil HI Rl JONES Meaoe M. Morris Milton Moses ). S. Roberts C ' lARINTE Sl ' TIILRLANO MHIIMIhlllltltMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIMIIIIII! I ' ot ' il ' ' iiiiiiiiiiiiiiilillliillllllllllllr :uilllllllllMllllllllliiiiii iilillilllllllii ' iMUiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiillllllllllllllllllillv: O microti Nil Eta Chapter, 191 S Officers Helen Churchill Presiderxt Hazel Branine Vice-President Betsey Madison Secretary ' erna Johnson Treasurer Meiiihers in Fmtilty Miss Abby L. Marlai r Miss CoR Binzel Miss Haxel Manning Miss Amy L. Daniels Miss I drothy Roberts Miss Jean Kruecer Miss Celestine Schmit Mctiihvrs in I ' liiwrsity iirailiiar,- Alice Lloyd-Jones Rosemary Loughlin 1918 I Ia:il Branine Verna Johnson Helen Churchill Betsey Madison May Groendyke Genevieve Moore Esther Heisig Dorothy Paine Katharine Hudson Garnetta Sc;heid DoRorffY McGiNNis Florence Sprecher nlllllMlilltllllMllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMIHIIMtllllllMllllllllllllllllillMIIIMIIIIIr: llllMniinitUKItllMlllllllllMllllllinillflMIIIIM! ' Mcchanicul Iin«inecrini{ ( ' rutcrnuy Pi Tail Si}rnia l ' iinJcJ at the University of I ' .linois, 191 S ll;„ V......,w„ h)!-; $h % S C.allu Phillips Rolx-rts Metnbers i ' acuUti Ariiu R Laurence Goddard GLsiAvt; LuDwiG Larson Robert McArdle Keown James David Phillips Axel Edward Bergcren In i ' nwersilii 191 S James Fr, nk Roberis Raymond Michael W irka Kurt Lolis Seelbach Raymond Miller Kenneth Grinnel Shiels 1919 Glenn Barton Warren Edwin Alered Galll ' n Shicls Scelbcch Goddard Wjrka i •iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiMiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiin I ' at ' • ;: llllllllllllltllllllllllllli ' lllllllllllllllllllllllltllllltilll Mystic (Circle Mystic tjrclc is an intcr-sorority society composed of members from [ ;Ita Gamma, Gamma Phi Beta. Kappa Kappa Gamma, and Pi Beta Phi. Each year the society undertakes at least one big chiiritabic work, and Red Ooss work is done at each meeting. First Semester Marjorie Hendricks Elinore Schweizer Officers President S. ' crelary-Treasurer Second Semester Elinore Schweizer Marc.aret Race Members Josephine Ferguson Margaret Eraser Marjorie Hendricks Katherine Mabis Elinore Schweizer Lucille Biebermann Marion Boyce Anne Briccs Lauretta Conklin [ DROTHY Grace Helen Gr, y Katherine Munson MARt.ARir Race Ianet Butler Josephine Caldwell E ' lizabeth Candee Louise Duro-op JANicr Dlrrie .• line Elles Mary Ella Ferclison Xda Kroening Bertha Blaul Marjorie Dov : Jean Ford Julia Hanks .Annie Laurie Hoard Dorothy Hollantjs Helen McCarthy Frances Ryan Katherine Schmedeman Ruth Storms Kaihi Hisi SiMiii: riiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiir; iillllllllMlilllMllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllh llonc.rjjrs Alhk-lic Society Star and Arrow Mctiihers in Fiiciilty Frf-d G. Carter Thomas E. Jonf.s Ernest O. A Lange Gl Y S. LoWMAN John R Rii.hards William Richardson Edward S. Shrank Joseph C. Steinaler Menihers in I ' riiicrsity Kenneth E. Bahe Henry L. Bie.rsach hobart e. bondi Harold VV. Brock William Stephen Chandler Demmer Golden Howard J. Hancock Harry R. Heint:en Donald W. McGinnis Arthur C. Nielsen James D. Peterson E. Edward Saberhac.en Armand R. Schiller Eber E. Simpson, Jr. Andrew I. Andrews C ARL P Bai ER Roland Brennan Charles H. Carpenter Gordon W. Crump Bernardo W. Elsom Martin A F-ladoes John Bennett Ot;DEN Cook Henry C. Dennis Stevens Cjoi ' ld Georce K. Mills Clyde L Nash KiNi. G. oodard l ' )20 Anthony G. Zileer Lucius W. Hipke Harold Knapp .William O. Olson William Maleckar Paul P. Rudy Robert M. Sutton Edward B. Willi.vms Ronald W. Ramsey Allen Spafeord Harold Stark Edwin A. Swmnsen George E. Van I Iagkn Robert C . Woleers Millard M Barlow Rudolph 1 I Blatter RulXrt-PII L. I loHLI ' l LD Paul A Kayser William H. Matcheiie Clarence W. McIntosh John O. Pauly Cjordon D. Shorney iiMliiiillllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIillllllllllllllll nil I ' ait ' }t 0 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii: ■ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiihn imiimiimimmiimiiimiiiiiiiiii: Senior fk.n..r S., Iron Cross LeROV. IaMES BURLINCAMt Portland Chase Donaldson Howard Joseph Hancock Cecil Lloyd Holman Pal ' l Duncan Meyers Eber Edward Simpson Verne Vincent Varney Robert Miller Brewer William Stephen Chandler Ray Sanford Erlandson Donald William McGinnis Arthir Charles Nielsen ■■  l l ' ■■■■ ' ■■■■IIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIillllllllllllllllMlllllllllllllllllllimilllltlllllllMIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII P li4 Jbl iiiiitiiiiiiiiiitiiitiiiiiiiiiillllilllllllllllllllllllltltl: Mortar Board Mortar EJoard is the senior women ' s honorary society, which has for its purpose the following ideals: Womanliness, Scholarship, and Service to the university. The definite work of .Mortar Board is the earning of one hundred dollars for a scholarship fund, and the care of the Mortar Board Cooperative Cx)ttage. CaIIIURINL C.LLMrR Dorothy Bixl El MIX L ' )L ' MMF.R 1 li;i-[-N (ammim. President ice-President Treasurer Secretary El.sik HowiiLL Clara Ingwi-rson Ei.i:ahi;iti Kicndaix Marjorii- Kinnan Mary Kohi ii ii Dorothy Loomis JNGRID Nelsi:)n Rl ' TH NOKR Margaret Ro.f.rs MaDELYN SlAM iiiiixd Ri 111 Sioi.li-; MiMiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiuiuiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiL Pat ' ) ' ! ailinilillllllllllllllllllllllllMlinillllllllllllMIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIUlililMIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIi: White Spddcs Q 19IS Frank Victor Birch Leroy James Burlingame Portland Chase Donaldson Stephen P. Fox Demmer Golden Reynold C. Grosser Howard Joseph Hancock George B. Henderson Clarence William Hendrickson Cecil Lloyd Holman Paul Di ' ncan Meyers John C. Miller Eber Edward Simpson George Earl VV ' allis Searcent p. Wild Carl P. Bauer Joseph B. Beach Charles H. Carpenter Paul Frederic Cranefield WiLLARD 1.. Dayton Edward L. Deuss Martin Alfred Flaixies Harold M. Groves Carl A. Hoppert Harry H. Scott Alfred Paul Haake, ' 14 Francis Deumar Higson,. ' 17 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiHMiliiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii il faur I ft ) •llUtlMnilMlHUHIUlHtllllliniltlMlilinillMllli Sophonuirc SKiciy Skull cuul (Jrc.scciit William Baldlrston Cakl p. Bai lr ChARI 1 S I C.ARPl-.MLR Loi IS P EwAi 1) William S CjALHRi:Arn BR. oLiiY H. Hicuii; Fred M. Bickel Leonard F Frikson Stevens Goild John H. Grace Lennox G. Haldeman Ralph Hor ion George S Holiseiiolder Henry G. Isaacs Ray f- ' . KiKiiiNt.MAN Passive Members 1 Ienry M Lei.i.er iliiam j m oy W ALTER MaNDEL Lyman M. .VIaiher 1 iAROl.l) W, NaECKEL • Ufirt ' Mem hers F-REDERic I . Mills RoBERi B. Neelen C.YRl ' S L PlIILIPP FnwARn O Pringle Rom Ri L Rewey l ' )oNALn W Reynolds Fred J Rieiprw k Sampson Rogers, Jr Ali-xaniii n 1- Simpson- Pall P. Rudy Giiarles a. Rawlings Armand R. Schiller j Fred S. Stlhler Robert L. Whitlock King G. Woodward J . Douc;las Simpson Richard W. Steele Alkred H. Taylor Paul Van Gent Newton V. Wagner Alon:o L. Ward Henry C. Wellaler Frank L. Weston Anthony G Zuleer JoSEI ' H B BOLENDER Roland R. Boswell Thomas C. BRiiriNGiiAM Benoyt S. Bill Horace J (w r er Alberi B Fwin(; Robert If Fagan Lathrop F. Follett Paul A. Ivsysi-r Plediies 1921 George B Lilly RoBERi F M(MAsn:R I Iarry F Mar I ens W illiam K. Mi k iii-.i l Ro! ERI Cj. PclNDEXll-R Rex V. PoRiER I ll-NRY B RoYCE I loWARD F SaMMON W II I lAM K ScllAAB I I WIS P S ii 111 Rii ss Cj Sti hler Harold H Titus Wesley Tra er Karl Wagner Kent T Wakeeield Robert W. Waln John H Warren John F Wheeler Frank T. Wolie lliriMlltUlllllilllMIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIinilKIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIKIIIIIIIIIIMMI Pan St,4 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiii iiMi MlllllllllllllilllllllDi Inner iiatc % % % I f %:% r% ' :% Ciundt sen Hohmann C ' ranJall W.lliu ms Duncan Jon : T rcll McCandlcss LaDu Members Loyal Soithwick Baker Burton [3ocardls Bacley Richard Walsh Baldwin Harrison Cr mn Barnes H ROLD William Bille Kenneth Hanson Burner J NO. Morgan Callander, J r. Thomas Clark William Dlnoxn Connor, Jr. Luther Bailey John Webster Brindley William Edward Carroll Joe ChamberLyMN Samuel J AMES Cusson. Jr. Albert Kandall De.xter Charles Wetiel Dorries IoSHUA GoWER pLDER 1 10 George Crandall Howard McLehlan Dodge Francis Willard Dunoxn Alf Helce Gundersen Gavin Campbell Hawn Richard Pittman Hohmann Russell Alger Jones Charles Mayo LaDue I ' m Charles Wf tly Felker Wellsley I 5bson Gray Walter Heller Otto Alfred Jun ; Jr. Burton Gaynor Lund Allen Hollis Miller Li ' DLow Frey North John Oiio Pai ' LY Sumner Warren White George Hurley Ly.vian Stanley Russell McCandless Herbert James O ' Brien Willard Sanders Crak, Royer Siieafker Robert Kevil Thomas Richard Hanlon Tyrell Stalham Leon Willia.ms Herbert Beach Wrk ht John M. Padikxk Harry Ale.xander Phillips Selden VIltnger Pu;krell DeW. V ' anOstrand Pinkerton Edward V. Puvtt King Richardson Willis Rolinseville ( harles Winfield Winston -illlllllilMllillllllllllltlllllllllllllHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIllllllMIIIIUiMIIIIMIIIIIIIMMIMIIIIIir ' itMltllMIMMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII .llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli; Piinh elleii ic As so cia tion Punhcllcnic AsMKiation was organized to maintain sorority life and intcr-sorority relations on a high plane, and to K- a lorum for the discussion of questions interesting to the college and fraternity world. Officers First Semester Second Semester Hi£LKN M. Davis President VIarion R. Miller ICvrHERiN ' t W. Browne .... Vice-President Dorothy Grace DoROTH- - DicKERSON Secretary Doroihy Smmh Joanna R Haves Treasurer Jeanette J. I.amb Me III hers Seniors Winnifred Corwin Alpha Xi Delta Marjorie Griesser Chi Omega Dorothy Dickerso.n .Alpha Phi Marie O ' Brien .Mpha Gamma lOelta Dorothy Brown Kappa Kappa Gamma Mary V ' ose Delta Delta Delta Helen Davis Gamma Phi Eieta Dorothy Browne Kappa .Mpha Theta Mari Bollman ■ . . . . Delta Gamma Elizabeih Pruett .Alpha Omicron Pi Betsey Madison Achoth Joanna Hayes -Pi Beta Phi Jl ' Aniia Hardman .Alpha Chi Omega ViLiniA BoHAN .... .Alpha Xi Delta Mildred March Chi Omega Jeanette Lamb .Alpha Phi Genevieve Gouch .Alpha Gamma IX-lta Mavis Chubb Kappa Kappa Gamma D(irothy Smith l )elta IX-lta l elta Eleanor Dana Gamma Phi Beta Marion Milii-r Kappa .Alpha Iheta Sl ' A I Ramm:v IX ' lta Gamma Irene Fol ;kiaii:r .Alpha Omicron Pi Ray C:ooli:y .Achoth DiiMom ' CJKACE Pi I Via Phi ttlllllllUIIUIIIIIIIIItlllllllMiniMIIIIIMMIIIIIMHIIIinilllllllllllMllimilMIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIinillllMIMIIIIIIIItllllllllllllllllllr: li ■ ■■■ ■ asasm ■ ll 1 raLerniLies - iiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiilllilillililli:!i: iiltllllltllllllllllllllllllllltllllllllllllll!: Phi Delta Thcta vu iJi-J u A iumi ( iii .f.M , IS4S V ua ' n.sm, Mfilw. ISiT Number of Chaf U ' rs. ■i I nine A . ' mNTA-. 2fl ' «t fllM fj! Gregory LX-y Grant Sherman Kuchin irtHh McnRtlbcrK tvans Mclnlosh bhtldon Grubb Hradt Baldwin torir M. lector W Moroncy Moran Maurer OBtien Wri«ht 1 PaJJiH-k EII15 BuckmasUT Miichill J Moroncy S While K White Arnold Bennett Hall Glstus Ludwic. Larson Members in Faculty Edward Robert Maurer Flf.tcfifr Andrew Parker Menihcrs in I riiwi sify V. D. SrovALL William Lynn esierman Robert Miller Brewer Harrison Evans Elcene Dickens Mai rer Richard Walsh Baldwin Dean Albert Blckmaster Alexander Richardson Gram C ' .ROMWM 1 Mar I IN Allen Earl Eu .ene Carpenter (;arl Devsenroih f ' ADWKi.i. Abijah Foster Lawrence Wm. Gregory 1919 Walter Rlt i li h Menc elberc; 1 9 20 Norman Albert Kuchen(an William Jos. Moroney. Jr. 1921 I-I ERE 1 r Lorraine Cjribb (t.arence William McIntosh John Miln Mitchit.l John Mincer Paddoi;k Alan Emmons Pradt John William Seids. Jr. Richard Mil ion Siorer Edward Leonard Mor.. n Howard Cole Sherman John Rodcers M ironey Herbert James O ' Brien Herbert Biv 11 WRuaii Jack Gilberi Sheldon Edison Loihair Teeior Mac Y Orvii.i E TEEroR Richard J osi I ' ll Wiim . Jr. SiMNi R Warner Whih niiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiitiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiKiiiiiii.:..: .uiiiiiilllllllllilillllllllllllllllliir iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiitiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ' iiiMtitiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiili: P 7z Bcha ' Wieta - , s,- r t i - Sigil £[i;i; -ri.i 1 J 3 J 0JM. i .. V- ' j i niniriiia r— it!iini;Tfri_ •C C3„ HOA ' OR ROLL John Boenig Dow Carpenter Linton Cox Robert Ellis Neil Hallock AooisoN Hayes Loc ' is Haves FREn Hi mmel Earle Kemp William Macfadden Oral Manseield Robert Marling Charles McIntosh Robert McIntosh Herbert O ' Brien Herbert Parker Early Poindexter Gorhon Reese Haroio N ' iieeler Allan Renton Roland Rogers Howard Sherman Edison Lothair Teator I Iarold Taylor Charles Ulmer Charles Walton Wesley Walion RiuiARD White -illlllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIllllllllMllin IIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMMIIIIItllllllh .IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIII Jicta I he til Pi roiinJi ' J al A iami i niicrsity. IS39 W isconsin. . i ui Pi. AV ? Xumber of Chapters. SO l,ivtn Members, 22, S7 G Gundcr cn Bluti GunJcf-cn McMast l si Wii.tc McKay Kinzcll luckcr McC Smith Jung Wolfcrs BalJcrsUMi KniRht Jacob. S GunJcrscn Warner ThonipM.n Rolxrl WiMiams Rogers Bnndlcy SucIkt Barnes Rcttgcr Rictow Woodward Nash Simpson A Gundcrsen f-arringion Suiton Ward Balmer k ' onnis i.uin la 1 ..llette Schaab Avery Rawley Williams Charlie ! Ienry BtrNTiNC John English Hystur Carl Russell Fish Ck rdon Scott F l ' La LR William Ullery Leonard Mctntn ' j s hi htnuiry I-REDliRlCK Austin Ot;r. RANCIS Brown I M Smii Leonard Sewell Smith Maxwell Austin Smith John R Richards I NALD MoMl ' RRAY Donald L IUlverson Members in Vriiiersity Rohert Newton Williams Sk.uard Bijarn Gundersen Gl ' Nnar Gundi-j m--n W illiam James McCoy Ralph Gi ' nn Si ' oier Marion Armsirono Knicht William Balderston Walter James Ward Philip Fox Carl La l-OLi.ETrE KincGrier Woodward 1919 Joseph Rider Farrincton BiRTON l-j.iiERT James RoiiERT Charleys W( Li iiRs 1920 Civni LrsTiN Nash I Iarliy . KlMK :hmn Bakni ' Bi-NjAMiN Fdward Sivyi r. Jh SaMI-MIN RiK.LKS CHAKI I.S IllOMI ' SOS John AtVANQi iMPY 1 ri diric( m r CioiJtiii: I Iarold ( LARi Smith William Kenneth S jiaaii RofU ' JiT (- isHiji McMamih John WiJisiiJ Bhindli y Olio AliredJi Ron IN Mu is Warner RtiLLAND Franklin Wii liams lit ' NNARCi ( LNDLRM.N WiiiiAM B I i.mi A • ifMiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiMMiiMMMiMiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiminiiiniiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinitiniiiuiir aiMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIll IIIIIUinillllllllllllltllliiiHiiilMMIII ' . eta ' Ohcta ' Pi Wayne Vxteu, Ceouce Eaton Biko ScYMcxm Cook Boakdman Ld« AMD David flAiifK s Jl ' LIan Da ,st Cosovfrj RofKJIT SfoCIAAY DaVIDHON Ratuont) LoLfti FkKD EU.I.W4 CjKufKT Donald Hatdcn HOSOR ROLL Jack Mayden GlISTAVt Rkinhold jACOni BcTiTON [ir.iiutr Jamea jAMtS JE-NKINS HEFBEitT Martin KieCKEFEn Cakl Joseph Lant-iiopf Miles Landcju BurrroN McKinley Paul Duncan VIkyeiu John Mitqii ll Halsey I- ' rank Owen Wiu lAM Howard Rietow Donald McCokmick Sack DUDLEY CiiA B Smith Walter Jamea Ward Roiibxt Nbwton Williams dudlcicii youmo Gavin Youno nUUtlinMUIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIItltlllllllllillMlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltlllllllllllMIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIimilllH ra,4 in M oMiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiMMiiiniMUiiiHiitii IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIC: Phi Kappa Psi I ' ounJcd at Jefferson CotUre, ISS2 Wisconsin. . iu V7 Xumher of Chapter y 4 ' l.nm Members. 12. U I r I-unke Pnbnow Malhcr Ycrly lioardman MaoJJc lir w llt Uunge Cook Ward yam Schiller McCabe Van Auk aRner Morsell Gutcnkunst .McnilH rv ill tin iilly Plrcy 1 ' )a vson Arihl R Hamilton Ariiiur Sperry Pearse Mem her « in f ' riii ' iTAiry Newell Stephen Boardman Harold John Bryant Harold Winfield Bu::ei i. 0 Frank Joseph Funke William Michael Kelley Armand Robert Schiller Lyman McC ' onnell Maimi k 1 19 Reuben Mills Ward Lester Fallett Mc( aue 1920 Paul Sianlev an Auken Curtis Benedict Morsell Henry Conrad ellauer Arnold Fuller Prihnow WiLERID LeROY YeRLY Gi-oRi.E Christian Bunc;e 1921 C]eorc.e K. Schmidt Hamilton Biggar Cook Galbraiih Smith Randolph Cruzen Harold Hill Titus William Dooi n Rlissell Lewis Thompson ( JIARLES AlHI-.RI Gl IINKINSI Karl Wagner l iiii I IP w MIIM rn Warner llllllllllllllllllilllllllll iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiMiiiitiiMiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiir: :JllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllltlllUIUmillUllllllllllllli!i«i. ■ iMIIIIUIMIIIHIIIininHIIIUHMMIIi: PJii Kappa Psi HONOR ROLL Pal ' L Stanley Van Auken Maurice Barnett Newell Stephen !3oardman Norman Conters Bradish Harold John Bryant Marcus Thomas Casey John Lindsay Cuvrk Hamilton Biccar Cook Carrol Chester Crane Phil Diehl Frank Joseph Funke William E. Ili-.tt William Miciukl Kellky Philip Wasmbi Roland Kibbe Carl Maedje DUNWOOD LOWRIE McDoNALD Curtis Benedict Morsell Arthur Moll Henry Olson Arnold Pribnow Harry Pribnow Vernon J AMES QuiGLEY Charles Roberts Bob Rowlands Galhraiih Smith Karl W ' ai.ni-.r RN Warner nlllllllllllillllllllllillllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIMMIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIMIMIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIilllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIMIIMIIIIIimilllllMlli; iiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil: Clii Psi r.v,rJrJ :i! I rt-r- Cnll,--,- l l! Mpha Ida. A imhir of Chiil U-rs. 30 11 f « • I  Pnilipp Rygli C ildwcH I S. OShca Rambi onnor iizgcrald i laiiinc I nomas Coleman SchiocJcr Biiltingham Wurlitzcr V. OShca Kawling!. Spafford Higl ic Hurley Blount Nk ' RRAV CJIARLI-S Bl-.ICHI- EiGi NE Hugh Byrse Members in Faculty F-RANK Gayiord 1 Iibhari) Charli s Foster Smuti Members in University No Seniors 191 ' ) Robert Draki-: Fiizi.irai.i-) Edward Knk.mt 1 Iiri i :y Allen Si ' aeioro Nathan Bradi ey Hk.hie C ' harlls Ali red Rawlini;s Raimlnd Billings W ' LRLrrrER l )20 JOHN C RAY BloLNI. .) R t E 0R(,E t I.YMAN Thomas Beverly C.ALinvELL M. in(;ent O ' Shea. )r JOSEIMI A. C )LEMAN CyRLS LlClUS PhiLIPP Hi-.NRY Gargia Isaacs Fdward Si ANTON Bice Pali. Adolph 1 aysi;r Thomas Fvans Brittingham Sianley Daniel OShea William Rohert Carroll RoNAi n West Ramsey LIgdar Andrew Rygh john s hroeder Rom Ri Kevil Thomas SiLDiN Monger Pigkrell CjI-org.e I ' )i: vi:y Swan Saml ' el Wright ' iinMIIIMIIIIIilllllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIItlll iiiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiliilliiiiiiiiiiir i iitiiiiiniiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiii). Chi Psi -31312:- - •JJjjBB ' i- ..« u:_ _i52:- HOXOR ROLL Earl .Anderson John Ellsworth Beldkn Stanley Belden Edward Lyman Bill LeMLEL RiCKEirS JLLWARK William Russel Bradford Percival Fuller Case Harry Craig iLLiAM Hanlon Crane Raiml ' nx) Billings Jack Easton Farrand William Friend Fer(.uson. Jr Edwin Fish Gould Stephen Grover Gould William Fuller Gregson Donald Herrick Clem Kalvelege Robert Oswald Law Fred William Maack Charles Signor Ihomas. Jr. Wurlitier Frederick Kf.mii S that ton N(jHu.-.h MoRLANdJoHN McMlrRRY John Lendrum Mitchell Henry Winhi-ld Rk huir Charles F. Rand Rh.hter Carl Ba xoLtY Shank EiiGENE Morgan ' igneron Randolph Lincoln Wadsworth I Iowaro Stanli-.v Was:er Gaffron Von Syiiiri TllllllllllllllllllllllllllllinilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMllli: iiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiin ' tutlilllUlllllllllllllllllllllllllllltllllllllllllllllllllllllJIIIIIIIlii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii: Sigma Chi roundcJ at A iami L ' nivcrsily, I8SS V i.uon.dn. . i iii LamK u. .WV .Wimhi-r o Chat ltTs, 71 I ,Mo.- f,mh ' rs I ? -giS B.ildv m uly I- Sluhk- K.Stuhk-r Gilbrcath Moard MvmhL ChURLts Sumner Slic.hij h ill Fiuulty l I XANDER G. FiTF Meinl cr.i in I ' niiersity LaiV Jacob M. Leinenkloel Graduate Rkiiarl) 1 m I V TeI-inde. 19 IS Wii-i.fAM Syonor Gil uri aim. Jr. Liio W AiNW Rii.iii Ernst James Franklin I li msini. II I lAM Dempster Hoaro. Jr. Frei i RICK Stewart Stluler C jiARMs Wai.kivr Baldwin Earl I-j)wari) I ' m rni;ss Walter I Ier.man Gal ' sewiiz Charles I Ienry Klincler RoHERI C ONNILI. OrR f-REOERICK Jl LH S RlEIHRCH K ( RAic. RoYER Siii;ai I IR Rkjiaru I Ianlon I yrell John Radell I Iarris Allen I loi.Lis Miller Harolo I Ienry F slt. ) 1)1 IN Olio Pally Robert Gaylen Poinoe.mer R|E-SSGeOR .E SllHlER • MiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiii iiiiiiiMiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir; UllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllMMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIHIIIIIIirillllh iiinMntiiiiiiiiMiiUMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii: Sii ' ma Chi HONOR ROLL Charles Walker Baldwin Earl Francis Buelow John Pollock Childe Mal ' rice Garrett Clearv Chester Emery Cleveland, Jr Robert Wood Crawford Carl Mallery Emmerich HiLMER pLtRST ErNST C iARLi-:s Farql ' har. Jr. John Georc.e Garibaldi W. Sydnor Gilbreath, Jr James Franklin Hemsing William Dempster Hoard. Jr. Alfred William Ioiinson Charles Curtis King Edward CoNYERS Payne Larrabee Philip Henry Lasher Robert Bruno Neelen ictor Jackson Obenai ' Er. Jr. Robert Connell Orr .Alexander McLeod Oskamp Robert Gaylen Poindexteb Frederick Julk ' s Rietbrotk William Hiir.n Shearman Sidney .Allerdice Stoi t Rk.hard Hardin(. Sroii Frederick Stewart Stuhler Donald William Tyri li. ElllllllllllllllllltllllllllllllllllUIIIIIIMMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIilllMIUMilUIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIUnilMllinillllliMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIMlim Pat, I- iuuHiiiMiiiiiniiiiiiiiinniiiiiMniiiiiiiHiiiiir iiiiinniiiiiint! Delta Upsiloii V,.u..Mjm Chat ter. IS rcunJcJ at Ki aUanxs CoUc e. ISU umfcr of C ha filers. 44 Lcmm-Marugg I£vans Gavcncy Hipkc May livans Burner Spickard Iiros.sard Whittct V I lipkc Fladocs Hi •rcn Littig I lirshhcir VV htclcr n Schmii: Holtr Dclancy CuARLiis Ki-MiiR Allen Chester Allen Harold Crosvenor Bleyer Harold Cornelius Bradley m I lAM B Cairns Members in Faculty Wayi nd Johnson Chase Georc;e Converse Fiske Edward 1 Iall Gardner Edward Kremers Donald I ' redrick Mattson Frank Otis Reed Ceorce Clark Sellery Walter McMynn Smith Benjamin Warner Snow Fuoene Taylor Members in rniversiry EucENE Edward Brossard Donald Elliott Campton William Stephen Chandler William Francis Delaney Martin Alihed Fladoi s Stanleich Keys Gaveney LuciL ' s Warrington Hipke Kenneth Hanson Burner Edward rHOMi s« N Evans James Amukose Evans Harry West Hirshheimer Harold Lawrence Holt2 William Kelsey Howison Carl Li:MM-MARitcyrj 1920 Gavin Camphell Hawn GlIlMJtTjAajUHll ' KE James Warren JtntNsoN X ' ernon Winc. Packard Armin Daniel Sqililt: Jami: Lowell Whittet Lawrence Victor Littic Neil Edward Nash Raymond Schmitz Leland William Speckard George Lew is May Donald W ' At.NER Reynoi ds I Iapoi d Donovan I li-Npy 1 1 Harris N ' altlr (-mank I Ielli I i2l Wilmarth IcKIvS Adrian Lucius Lammers Wm lis RfH ' NsLVILLi: John I Iyland Warren Willi:t Mapcus Warren John Edward Wheeler inMinillllliniiniMIUIIIIMnMHIMIIMMIMHIIIMMMMIIMIMIIHIIinntinillinMtlHUIHIIIMIIi ragf 17H Jiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiriiiiiiiiiiiriiiiii .lllllllllllllllllllllllllUMIIIIIinilllllL: Dchci Upsilon ■ ,yym r;2 ' A k |«IIWi,irj; llaXOR ROLL Eugene Edward Brossard Gail Vanden Braak Warren Rk hardson Bruce William SriiPiicN Chandler I :)nald Ei.i.iott C ' oMProN James Ambrose Evans Wilfred Evans Martin Alered Fladoes Stanleigh KeysGaveney Percival IDtWirr Girson Lucius Warrington Hipke Harry West Hirshheimer Fred Parker Hughes Robert Col ton Johnson Donald Coffin Jones Clark Emory Kauffman Birr Edward Lee Cari. Lemm-Mariic. ; Palil Robert M :I )onald Louis ( jiriste Newton Vernon Wini; Packard Eugene Kramer Quicx; Armin Daniel S hixt: John I Ivland Warren nMIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllMiiiiit llllllllllltlllllttlllllMIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIttMllllllttlllltUIIMIIMUIli 1 liilllllllllllllliMllllllllllllllllllMllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllll MIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIL Delta Tau Delta Founded al Bethany College, 1SS9 ' isconsin Beta Camma, .V.V.S ' Number of Chapters, 60 Living Memher.y 14,000 I- I J I 9i % % L nipt. ii lilchcU Lnks fi AJdn) bicnjuii licpaiJ Liiiatii Hc6cnian iVliU Scclbach Fmgibbons Pink i- ox F. Mann Rogers K. hkwclt Rudy Gray Tcckcmcye Davits Grace Morcy StmrjJ l-lanU- I iiLXic Cusson W. Hcwctl C. Marn MciJil ' crs in Fuiiilty Prof- i;.ssoR John L Kind Prohissor Robirt Si ihoi.t Metnhcrs iu I ' ltiwrsity 19LS Stephen P. Fox John J. Pink Alired M Rocers 7979 Ernest Adams Pail P Ridv Floyd Hewett Otto Seelbach Frederick J Mann. Ju Pail A. Semrad Thomas Shepherd 7920 Leonard [• Erikson Edward ' . Hanley ( JiARi.i-s M. La I3i I- 79. ' EvEREi r J . Campbell Samuel J Clisson Franklin C. Davies James M. Fit:cibbons Will B Gnagi, Jr. 1 InWARD R CiRAf.l- Wellesley D. Gray Walter W. Hewett CJusiAV B. Mann William K. Mitchell Donald NL Morey AdOLPH O TkKI MEYER L • iMilMillllllllllMMIUIIillllllllllllllllllllllllllllMlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilliilllllMllllllllinillllltllllllllillllllllllllr Pat ' ixn iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiittiiiiiiiiuiiiiiii ' - Q cha ' Tcui ' Delta 1 IIOXOR ROLL Ray Baldwin Aubrey Bomj John Campbell Charles B. Dunn Willis Durst Chauncey Frisbie Harold Heseman Hasbrolck Hefner Floyd Hewett C. Wallace Johnson Wilber Lambert Arihi ' r Luders l-tSLIE l.UDERS NoBERT VIaRKUS Paton Mi:Gii vary Joseph Mills Arnold Pampirin Bernard Pease Glenn Richardson Scott Robertson Carl Rohsenbercer NoRRis A. Sinclair Joseph G. Skirm Staniford SgUIRES Eldon Stenjem John L. Si ' llivan Rl SSELL TeCKEMEYER Joseph Weix iiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiitiiimmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiitiiii,,,,,,,,,,,,, iMlllllllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIII Phi Gumtiia Delta I ' lhidJiJ al UAhingUm and Jcjfcrson, IH-tS Wisconsin. Mu. .Vi Xumh.T of ChafJlcrs. 6 Livinf: Manht-rs. 17.441 bu ..nt; K llohlklJ R ll.-hlltiJ Stxir;. u: ll;ildiman l i)rtcr Schmidt I ' rilzlalT Hyrmr I U Hump Uuus Stikrl M.inn la .i Wolcctl Uimh Pond l- Bump Georgf. R. Basi om A. E. BiRGI.RI N FRt;l5 V) C.RAWSIIAW Mctiiheis in Faculty liinviN ( ' ■ I loi.nKN 111 JAM S KiNNK Olio 1- K(i VAiJ i. EnwARn A Rciss AlLXANDLR N. W INLUbLL Law Rl N E l.l INCSION A crji  ' !. ill I ' liiwr.sirv Edward F-rank Priizi.aee 19 IS DiAM Smiih Bascom RiX.ER Cill.BERT WoLCOTT Howard Golden 1 Iymur g g Frank Ai . ()RIll Ross George Pall Miller Franklin E. Bl ' mp. Jr. Lennox G. Haldeman Charles A. Giiinsi v 1920 Lot IS R. Mann Ray Or ro Schmidt Stanli:y an I )yke Bitts Whitney North Seymour JOSEPH Levi Walion CjEor .e Ghamberlain Warni R Smiih Bimi Graham A Ruil 1921 Thomas I Ii;nry Pond Thomas Fosier Strong Roni Ri I Ialdirman Fa(;an Rex ' an Fleet Porter Gari I Si lEERi RiiDOLi ' H L. THoiileeld Karl ' . Hoiileeld TIaroi D L Lamh ' iHIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIilllllllllllllllllli iiiiiiiiiniiiriiiiiiiiii Jllllllllllllllllillllllllllllll iilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilliliiiiiilllilllllllllt: ' Phi Gamma Dcha s?,J HONOR ROLL Carlton Lf.roy Austin Roy Frederick Fischer Deane Smith Bascom Carlton Harwood Foster William Jefferson Bleckwenn Milton Leroy Gardner Melvin Leroy Brorby Mead Burke Lawrence Kinsie Carroll David liLLiorr Day John Edward Grimm Clarence W. Hi;ndrk;kson Byron MacLeod I liu. Gillette Hill Robert Forrest Tillotson Ernest Hamond Hlibdell David Benjamin Kuentli Alexander Dot Lance Edward William Nicoll RissLi.L Raymond Palmer (iRAiiAM Alfred Ruhl Paul O. Sunderland Titiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilillllii! iiiiiiiliiiiiii!i Theta Delta Chi rounJcJ III ( ViKvi LUUX ' . .SJi;uau. v. . . Y , I S47 W i. a n.(in, Sterna Dculeron. IS ' ) XumhiT of Chapters, 29 t % % % % E cdcrcT SchhtTiKcn Bird Slokdyk Dcani .. K «:h Rovcc MacKII 1 Ml Ki ' i-. Mill.r Alu-ndorf l )kc McKa tic Schmiu Kilkr .Mcrtil ' cis in Fmiilry Snu ' iuiN Moil. TON BAi«.tx:K Stpphen ). Paitkn (iioK ' .i r. Wisrwii-U . U ' tiihcis in I ' niwi siry El.l IS AlMII.PlI SlOKOYK 1920 (. ' .. UinviN Ba(.ii Mason Tkaili. liiRn 1 loKACi: Klkiit.ir Dpan 1 loWARIl Baii.iv Doki- loiiN 1 li NRY CiR ( i:. Jr. Henry Farniim Griswolo Ma:f.n I lii.i. Pi TRii ROUURT LiVINl.STON RliWKY Francis Herman Schmm i ( JiiioN Mil ton Ti.Tii.i- Josi I ' M Br 1 1 M.I. Boll nim-.k 1 liRMAN Mar I IN Bri I IR Ll-.o joMi ' ii l-i:ni ri:r Clarim.i- Donmo I lii.i. Danii L I Iamii-K ' N Kki MR Wii.i.iam I- riiI)i ri k Ko h 1 luRlll Rl SlANI I Y MaNM II I.I) John 1 I. .M(.Kay KaRI. CJIRISTKN.SI-N Mll.LI-R MaI. .OI.M MiHIU 1.1. William .Xsa oi i I ll NRY BL ' RNSini- RoY( 1-. C ' .iiARi.i-.s ili.iam ' _Ri ssi;l Lu( ii:n Gi-.oR(.i-; 5v;iii.i i .in Rol Nn ( ioLl.MAN Sl ' RlNKMAN HMiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir I ' ner im ■iiiir MiiiiiiiitiiiiliimillllliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiK. vitlliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiir leta clta Chi HO. 0R ROLL Harlow D. Bl-rnside Robert H. Christy Donald S. Farlev Mathew R. Hayes RoscoE E. Johnson Dalvan C.Julian Cedric Logan Raymond O, Lyons Waltkr R. Mandel riioMAS G. Marshall William J. Nevin FaIRI ' AX G. SAL ' NDEhS Artiu ' r C. Sprinkman Wadsworth J. Warren ■ ■ ■I iKiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiraiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiuiuuiiiiiiiiiii; ftM Bi iMiiiiiiiiiiliililiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiin- Psi Upsilon l unJcd al I ni. ' n ( o ,-;. . ISJ3 Wtscon.sm, Rlu IS96 Wimbcr of ChapUrs. 2) Mi ' ttiln-is in h ' luitlry Bl RR W. JoMs Max Mason iLi.iAM SiAM i;v Marshall |i lils Emil Olson- Edward Thomas Owen A t ' fn •;, V in l ' ni cisity GiLMAN Dorr Blaki. John Fonda I owninc. Edward GtoRt uc Brittingham Lolis Philip Ewald •Allan Chase McClllolt.h Marcls Lulinc Baxter Edwin Alfred Gallun Milton Petii Griswold William J. 1 Iay, Jr. Edward John Harold Draper Stevens Golld John Francis F(amlin Richard Pitiman Hohman Rlssell Alcer Jones 1910 Edwin Rlssell Koeniger Pal ' l Stevens Kr,. mer Martin James Sheridan Thomas Wesilkv J ' l i tle Barnes Williams 1920 Samuel Hagar Marshall Edward Washin(;ton Mathews Edward Wellington Pow ers WiNFIELD ThoMI ' SON Frank Laurence Weston Llther I Ioar Bailey Francis Percival Brown Wells F. Carberry Burton Clark, Jr. Robert William Davis Kenneth Earle Rii HARD I iNAl.D Evans Gordon Grey Fairfield Cjiarles Westlev Felker Frank Win( hester Gray William I Iarrison .Matchette Edward Vilas Puxtt Gordon Duddrid .e Shorney KiCNT TOWNSEND WaKEFIELD ' HIllllllintllllllllinillHIIIIIMIMIMIIIIIIIIIIItllHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIl: illlllllllllHIIIIIIMMIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIII ' . Ps i Upsilon ' fr ft -,. ' - v.(._; ' .U ... HO.WR ROLL Herbert Pl ' llen Avrrs John Spracue Bauman Marcus Llxinc Baxter Oilman Dorr Blake Edward George Brittin .ham Louis Georc;e Brittincham Jacob Grafius Calvert James George Clark. Jr. Joseph Conway Dood John Fonda Downing Loi-is Philip Ewald Albert Rant)olph Johnson Glenn Harmon Klemme Edward Russell Koeniger Andrew Robert Mailer Richard Hughes Marshall William Hu(;hes Marshall Joseph Torbitt Mengel (-HARLES DeLOS MoRTON Martin James Sheridan- Carman BiGELOw Smith Frederick Lewis Spi-.rrv Frank Laurence Weston VvsE Beckwith Whedon -lllllllllllllimiMltlllllllllllllllllll MMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIMNIIIIIIIIIIIIIIiimilllllllllllllMllllillMIIIMMIIIHIIIIIUIIIIIII illMllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllNlllllllllllllll lUllllllt; Kappa Si} ma I ' ounJiJ ill ( nitcr.vi y c ' irj ' inia, cS ' 6 ' ' ( isCiTism. Bi-la : .M7on. hS ' S Xumher ' of ChafHers, S6 l.ivinc MemhtTs. I( .244 li aicctham l-alk Ulallncr l i-.L i. Uisbt Bvxk ilh li, ,v.u Kijii McBnJc Sullivan luydin Tuckirman Bowles CKidfrcy C.huich Holt: William Hi: ry I.k.iiiv Mcnihcis in hamlry S:OI I 1 luLLAND Gdodmc.ht RoRFRT M( ArIII K Kl-OWN Mctnhcis ill I iiivcrsiry H. L. W niTK 191 S U ' lLLLWi Alirtd Koi lm 11 Edw IN A. Hammkn Jami :s Dahi 1- Pltfrson David JoNT-s Bla 1 1 ni;r Hi:rbi;rt Gll :ec;k Schmidi RoBLRi Williams Wru.ht Porti:r Harris Brown Floyd Edmond Sl ' llivan Clari-mi- HivNry Zarse HARf LD ( JiWAN ( ' .HI 1 IIIAM JOHN J Wf.ISSK 1920 Wallacf. D. Dii-ior Arihl ' r K. Laydln Harold Rums Philip Haolev Fai.k Elmi:r M. M(.Bridi; Ariiur Roland Iihiman rXiDLI V Jami sCionlRliV Ryi iii:n M Padda( k 1921 Ralph S ott Wavni- I:or BixKwmi Waldi mar Fritz Bri-idsii r 1 1 AROI D Kl Nl l.U.III Y Edward Ii)si:i ' H BrkiiV John Shildon Bowli s til S 111 Kl RMAN, )r. Carl A C ' .iiijx ii W ' li.HiiR E. Holt; Pi AN Si ARK ■iS ' • DUIIIinillDIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIII MItllllllllllll Ullilllllllllll ' -IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIUIIIIIIIMIIIMIIIIII ' . Kappa Si ]ma ' i vJ u,i.,in,|iiiiinii ..uii ' j;( ' I ' ll .,. _. , .„. ...,..,,,...Fr_ ., .. . . , iiiiii ' iiii 4, nil. I l l| k l ' i.|.4„ll «lll || (f • -jI. II() 0R ROLL Richard White Beach Henrv John Beneke rollam) dureee esohnson MrLEORD Breidster Roland Edward Brennav Herbert Brilhtman Lee Markhwi Brown Thomas Bernard CIasey Graham Sankird Eas.v v Philip Haolev Kalk RiE.MAR Ai fii ' ST Frank Edward Grant Garnsey Thomas Henry Grees C ' HARl.r.S DoDf.E HoA . Arthl ' r a Jamieson David Harry Jennini.s icTOR HutiO Jones Harold Everett Kinne Pehcivai. p. Lewis (iiRoi.D Edward LuKimEN (ami s I ' McMani ' s James F. Mlinc.aven C i ii-EoRD Richard O ' Neil RoHICRT 11. OSHURN Rychen M. Paddock James Dahle Peterson Ralph 5 cott Chas Morrison Iwxidder Floyd Edmond Slu.livan ArIHI R Rol LAND ToOMAN Gi s Tdckerman. Jk. Robert L Wiley niiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimniiiiiiiiiiir: tZJ Mllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli. Phi Kdppii Si rni(i W i.u. n,«n, , i ui T u(o, NOI Xiimhcr oi Chat lcrs. 29 ,unr M.ml ' „y - ' Ml !-J ' ,miJl J..hn...n 1 IcJc HammonJ M.K-IItT Stckc Clark Mi.nct Kcycs Idvk Knilanv Lucl- htr ll.i«kiiis W auilu cr. While Clayton Nosh Hcasskr Pond Br.inLll W.KHlhuu.c Ncumi-iMcr Prangc l u A tvji H ' ;. ' ; I ' i Faculty Orso Clark GiLLiirr Loiis IfRMARor Rkbpr John Warnkr Tavi.or Iami s Wri-sikr W ' aison Mctiihers hi Vuirersity I Iarris (iRow Pnr I IIAVI:R ZaCIIARIAII ( ' l.AYION Roland Hibbard f-Ri;Di:Ri(.K Irvivj(; Jonks Gri:i;nsi adl Ravmom) N 1 Iawkin.s Hr.RMAN Pai I Si iiMim Earl Alblri I Ii.assi e;r PrKSLF.V I 1 loLMKS Gr.oRr.K W ' alh-r Nash a lako Cari vli Simm:r 1 20 RoHIRI RaLIMI tjLliNN FrLDLRICK ) A( Oti Ll ' E-ISt.lUR l.ORIN.. I MLonORK fHAMMOND El.TON KnU.MI MoRR l- f- ' REDi-RK.K Conway Ki Li.oiic Cmarlks 1 Iarolo Rav Oi lo Li-oNARn Sk Ki:Rr Millard M Harlow Rk.mard CJi;oR(.i: iioiiiAM William Cji.ori.l. Brown Ai iRi.D l.ocis Johnson Edward Ali xandi h Ki vi s Sri ' ART ( ro: iu r Knii.ans Cjlor ,i I Iirman Mot lli-.r, Jr. Carl Lolls Ni i miisii r Edmi ' nd l.oi is Pall Ulnrv CIari. Pran(,i- Irmni. (X)dhol ' .si-; Lh illHIIllUIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIillllllllllllllllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIr ■Miiiniiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiii! ■MIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIItllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIII ' - Plii Kappa Si f)ina Arthur Ray Bailie Clarence Albert Brandt Clark Smith Collins Crede Haymond Conley Raymond Henry Cummincs Francis Leo Drew Floyd Rk.hard Drew Karl Haeriel Fauerbach Charles Diller Frati, Jr Raymond Carl Grams Jacob Sidwell Hackney Jr Carl Frederick I Iayden HOXOR ROLL JOHN Barton McCarthy Armin Carl Neubert Stl ' art Andrew Pond Elmer William Pr n(e Gilbert Ferd Roddewk; Harold Henry !x:haper Earl Potter StiHNAHLE Perry Coke Smith Carl Alt.ust Smith Chester Davidson ' m.z Robert Brice Wiiiie Rav Evan W hi iams CARROL Barton Wi ' rster nlllllllllllliliiiiiiiiiiilillillllllllllllllltllllllllilllllii .lllllllirilMMIIMIMIIIIIIIMItlllllllllllllllllMIIIIMMlr: tu lillllMIIHIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIMIIIIMIIIIIIIItllllllllllllllllllfllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIi: Siama Nu RninJcJ at ir tnia Military Insltlute. ISc 9 V ' i sa niin, (.lamma I.amhda, I90Z .Wimhcr of Chat tcrs. 76 I tvin-i Memhers. 14 nO iW-9:-fi. A rir« Shaw Natckcl Mueller C-artcr RobC Ficdncksm UIcxxIri.vJ Phillips Smith McCandlcss Williams Kdc Mecar Domes Jono Oinley Wi.Kc Sanders Spies Wanner tv Len: l-amriKTi Wallau ' ounRren Fkld G. Carii:p. Framjs C. Krauskopi Mctrihcrs in Faculty W II.1.I AM I , IM-LI-I-R WaRRI-.N JUDSON MtAD IXw 111 J MIIII HarliiY Pros I Wilson Members in University hilt Richard Hoyt Ede F. ARIIILR pRtDRICKSEN JoilS: Wrsl-I-Y ll-l.IAMS I ' 19 alti:r Edward Mulllkr Harold u i iam Naixm-l 1910 Hl ' bert Carl Duecker Ausiin Thomas Rose Ernst ( arl Wallau SianleyRl ' SSELlM(.Candless Don Li k Shaw Newton Van Derveer W ' ai.ner 1921 Clal ' De Swansen (!onli;y Raymond Fri;d Lammert Gerald Spies Ctiarles VVetzil Dorriis Herhiri I. in: Ri sh D. Touton W iLLis Fannin(. Malcolm Mecariney F ' rank Tisch Wolee 1 low ARD Paleri Y joNES Harry Ali xandi-r Phillips Gi:or(.e 11 W ' atters 1 IoWARD I-RANt is SaMMON David Blooix.(H)d Pledges W II I IAM RiI lER Ralph Yoincri n Miticiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiillliiiiiilir iilllllllllllliii iiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin aiillllliillllillllMlliiiiillliillllllllllM:: Si ma c?Cu iinxnR ROLL Harry William Bond Frances Whitnkv Mathew Joseph Casey Fred Carter Ra ' mond Frank KiTCHiNc.MAN Arthur Fredricksen Herbert Diirand Wiuson Edward Willard Sanders Robert George Smith RlSSELI. G I.ISnSAY George Anthony Chandler Herbert Kramer HoRAfiE Webster Foski- i Maklem Gregory Rl ' SSELL I IaRTMAN William Walter Koch John Franklin Merrill Donald Sisson McCandless James Martin A. Payton Pai ' l Taylor Rothwell I Iaroi.o Parker Weeks William Monroe Young riiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiililMiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiti liilliillllliiiiiiiiiMiiiiir iiiiiiiiiiti tlj illllinilllllllKllillllllilllllllllllllltllltll: .IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIL ' Alpha Delta Phi ■; i n. c ot llamillon CotU- c ISU Vi.(c, n.vin Chal hr f Ol umK-r of ChafU ' rs, 21 l.iiin,; Mimhcr.t. S.SOO Mciiihii s in Itniilrv W ' llJJAM Bl.-UK Richard I hkodorl; li LV IrI DIRKK WlLI lAM Roi-: ILLIAM Amasa S.iiri Cl I IK Pa I II KSON Al IS MciiiIhis ill I iiivi-i sirv W ILI.IAM DoNAI nSON How AROS C ' .ARi. Philip Baikr CiiARi.i;s Hand ( ari i;mi :r I lilHART JOHN lioMONOS SiiL Ri V La vri-.N(,e-; i U;Nami:i-; I Iaroi 11 Jami s Prai I 1 20 Loyal Solthwk.k I akir Fri 1)1 RK.K M( Iniyri-. Bk ki:l I Iarry IIaion C.arswii I Klnmiii Sii rlin(. Day Kirk Dilano Ami s Gl;ORl.L LiL Bl ARIXSLI Y BliNOYr SlDM Y lil 1 I BURIOM CIaYNOR I.I ' M) IaMI-.S MlLION I.INDM-Y John 1 ' )oi!i.las Simpson Sami I L Philip ' an Oyki: SiALIIAM l.LON Wll I lAMS LiDLow Friy Nor III Frank I Ih. ;ason S.iiramm Li: vis Pi-niBoNi- .Smiih I li-.Riii Ri Alhiri Siolu-; illtllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllli iillliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii .....iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiMHMiiiiiiii; 04lpha Delta Phi ' i ' i iii sS? HONOR ROLL George Smiih Baldwin James Blair John Covode Blair CuoLETT Beach Caldwixl Portland Chase [ naldson Leland Sylvester Johnson Delos Bliss Kidder Frederick Leopold Stevenson Pal l Lewis David Beckwith Miller John Rohuins Ramsi- y I AMIS AriIII R ' l( KIIAM niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiimiiiimiiiiiii; ijtim iiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiitltiiiiiiiiliiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Sigma Alpha Ep.silou Heith rroKntr Brown Camiin II G.ilfrtds. Members in Faculty R.MllS IIlnry DISNISK.N himARi (.l.«..i, Hamim.s llll M 1 RID ClIiSE = I.ISNEAl S W AVI AM) l mi INC. ClILMliRjONns immmI1inryTwi:niioii;l — W 11 i.lAM Kkiitmann E Mcmhcis in liiiicisiry 1 (iratiuiMlv E Irii iri ;k WiiiiAM McKay = ; ' ;.v E Vi,iiamJ..i.s(;ami.s l-RANcis Orion KrYl-.s LoiisCi.Ainl. Rom z: Kaymond i:nwARC Kahoii.r JaMFS MaRsTON KuaiARDSoS . Cl AIRI. Ll-Sllii bcjINtlPLR = Hari. Kaisi r Nixon r_ ; ) • ' £ CioKiioN Dali-: Adams 1 h NRY I.AWRKNCi; CiOTl RIDSON 1 RANK Rowan (VI inniii. III. .MAS Mason Uaini.i.ii ..i l.Ylll I ' OTTIR l milJl n ;«( ' - Waiiik H..i.i inUiair RissLi 1 Manion l-i.niJ Pi NNIJ.I Cl RM Kil 1 Y CiabkJ Carkoii, u.i IS !■; 1 ii til I.or.n:Jaioi,Maimi z- AhUIIHAI 1) 1 K ' llIRI I ' l 1 IIVRIANI. HiRI Waikir p: KoilIRt Rl ' SM.U liRISNAN (,ii«..l 1) Hammir 1RMN A SMI E JaMI s BlRNARIl I .NA1.IIY WaI MR M KlAII-RoiH 1 IIIOI WaIIIORI. Sl-AR11N . E AllAMl.1 B.«.NI.R ClIAl NOV WiltOMl. Ml.lNIYRI AriIH R W All. E H..Y (HARMS (.1111 Kins. IN ( M IM R W ' l NI 1 I.I I ' llll 1 R Mason M W arni r i I HHiiillllllllllllllllMIIUIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIHIIIII illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll .iiiniiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiii ' - Si{ ' ' ymci Alpha Epsilon . .- ' ?? HOXOR ROLL Clifton Lawrencm Barnum Lloyd Brown Charles McPf.trioce Burgess Roy Frf.derick Burmeister John CaMMONS Walter Scott Craig AlLARD pRfKlNER Orl Leopolo Haddorf Harry Bernharo Haley Lloyd Allen Hammer Ralph James 1 Iarrv Hansberry Raymond Herner James Professor Chester Lloyd Jones Francis Orton Keyes Professor Lawrence Martin James Barnes Mosher Edwin James Rhodes Loiiis Claude Rove Albert T. Sands Artir ' r Wall NtooHi Wyatt TIIIMIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIMIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIi Ui Potr ' iiiiiiiiiiiiitiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir: ' KMIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIinilMIIIIMIIIIi Del til Kappa Epsilon I ' ounJcd al Va i ' i ' nivcr.uly, IS44 Wisconsin. Rho IXtia, W6 Xumh-r of Chat lcr.s. 4i I tvtni: McmKTs. I i.HH) J For- ' Mhc Kinc Stewart Muv W.irJ Ounciin lh..m.cn Zulfcr l-Iogaus ' an hiancn Hulhcrt Mcnihcis in Fucttlry Oscar )ami;.s Cami ' hi-i.i. Mosts Stui ' Has Slailmter Ml III hers ill I iiiversily I loWARD Al.MDKl. HaLBLR I W II.I.IAM McKlNLtV SiEWART WfLi lAM Ai.Hi Ri Fi.rx.Als Elbi :ri William Jones RoUIRl l.AIRn WlllILlV K Allen Ce il IXw ly John Silart Kinc; Fran(.is II. lard Dl n ;an ' ern Clayton Leai ' ER RouERi V. FoRSYiiiE Frederic Al-stroi Mayi-r Ralph Theodore Friedmann Francis Tiiorne Iiiomsen Geor .i-: Fly ' an Hacen. Jr. , lon:o I. ni) AnIIIONY CJl )R(.l- Zl LI I R FdWARD RiK K V|;LL lilNS(-.N I ' in II I.IAM . l .l SI Boi I R PU ' .lgcs Roland Rowley lioswELL 1). an Osirand Pinki rton William Benion Day ion Pai ' L Posial c;arl F. Peu-Rsun F oim rt uod Wai n ii tiiiiHiiuiiiMiiiiiiiiHi«iMiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiiniiiiritiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilllliiliilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Pai, J9II Ullllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll ■iiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Dchii Kappa Epsiloti IIOXOK ROLL Ravmdni) Uii.i.i.w) AmRiciir William Auixsils Bolrr Harold C. Collins BvALPii TiiroDORK Frii:d.via n James Edward Hardv lllOMAS E Vl. Hf.fferan HiK.vR RirF Hii I Harmdn Portf.r H xik Halford Harrison I iitlf:man Harrv Lloyd MarsiiaLl Frederic Austedt Mayer Charles Esmond Paine, Jr. R ' x.ER Franklin Peterson William Ernest Ross ' Li) [Dillon Wroe IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHI IIMMIIIIIIIMIItllllllllllllllllllllllMlllllllltllllllllllllilllllllMMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIR MtllltllllllllllMIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIMHIIIinillllli illllllMIMIIII! A cacia Founded at the L ' nivcrstly of Muhigan. IW4 W i cnsm Cha M,T, 0(l i. . i ' A ' V Morris John C5 Drips Ernest F. Bean Frank B. Hadlev Thomas E. Jones Hl ' go Kl ' ECHENMF.ISTER t ' llARLES K. LeITH ' lCTOR LeNHER MoRf ' AN Thompson Binney Geor(.e Leonard Adair Frank Victor Bircih Karl Kasim :r 1V rsa .k Lloyd Leonard ( ai. I A 1 1 IN Whelan 55r.on Thomson Crosswait vait Yates ' 1 isdalc Btnney Holman Metiihcrs in tiunlty I-ORI) I . Mf.CjRlA.OR W II iiAM S. Milli:r C.hari I s H. Mills (JEoR(,E B. Mortimer Reid ] ' . Ml ' rr y John X Nelmann Merit Ih ' is in I riiwisiry Jesse E. Sai ' c.stad H. Joseph B. Thorkelson Rk ' hard E ' ai(.hn l l townsend Frank E Williams William H. Wricht Frank Albert C.rw.ker Emery Morris Jonis W ILLIAM Edward E)rips Ray Sam ord Erlandson Henry Chester Moi-:sly C ' i;( 11. Lloyd I Iolman I LION Ellery Joiinscjn 191 ' ) Joseph Or in Wilson 1920 Frank ( ' hi r hill I ' i orine William Bl rlik.h Tisdale Meade McGinley Morris Pall Odin Nyhi s Eber Edward Simpson, Jr. DeWitt Edward Yates 1921 Al II R I ll NRY -.H INC. ( laricnc.e Fisiiir RaSMI ' SSEN illtlllMIIIIIMIIIIIIIIMIIIIMIIIIIItllllMllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllll I ' at ' 00 CAcacia iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiinniniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiittiiMi: . ' ?HIPH -t; ■:■ J - -rertt.«rc x, UKMfc .. ....o. ,. .- ' HONOR ROLL John K. Benton Allen .Uron Edwards Ray Sprague Owen Frank Victor Birch Ray S. Erlandson Carlton Enc.lfr Saecker Lawson Waterman Bishop Albert Charles Fiedler August Edward Sc.hillet ier FiNLA GoFF Crawford Henry Chf ter Fuller Russell Fayette Taylor S iLLiAM Edward Drips Cecil Lloyd Holman Daniel James Tfjvre I xwRENCE Erasmus Mi.yer Carl Frederick Young Tlllltll uiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiimiiiitiiuiiiiiiiiiii imiiimiimmmmmiiimiiiiiiiim iiiiimn illlltlinilMIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIMIIIIIMIMIIlin llllllllllllllllll Alpha Tail Omcaa rotmdcJ al irginia A i7i ury liT lilitte. IS6S isionstn, Camina 7ui I ' O ' . timhcr o Chaflfrs, 66 .iiin Members. 12.700 f f; « f I f t 1...r 1uilicr KK-kli KkT Wikl LV-cman l auman naix ;:ulKrf...n kkhcr I luuhins C: Ivwins Slmun I ' rvor Stal j A l£viinit I lou ch .kl..r Piar-on Smith 1 larkir i iidic BarlktT .Mfrithi ' is ill t ' iuitlry Aldlkv B. C ai-kins Pal L Fkj nklin- Ci ark JiiH Edward Coi sins JoSI PH SpRAr.LF. E ANS l JAN AlIJN ( JIARLHS I IjNMON Akifilr GiRDoN Laird ALiiR J Mi:lk Esnox Y 1 1 ri s CjIARLF.S OSIAR F.WINi. I. IK II SON Hi KIIINS Mi ' ttiber.1 in. Vniveisity i| ARl.l Nl Pl-AHODV ILD 1-1MAN AnDI RSdN Bl-.IMAN JiniN JSm-PARi) Bar I I.I 1 i John ili.iam Harkf.r David i,sion Mf)ORr. ILm mi 1 John Mlullkr C ' ari. Thi.oixiri-: Shapk Nils Emnd Siaho ClIXRLI :S OlWI V CXlbI RISON l ' )oNAI D John FlI.Dl.lR tji:oR(;i; Siix.rR I loi si iioi.Di r William Loiis Ki khai i ir TlllODORI-. C7lLI-.S MoNlAt.lF. I.INt OLN NlPRl D I ll RHI-.RI I IaRoLD SmiIH C.loRl.l. (il NDALI l IS I ll NRV Cj I lol UN Alhiri Bi I ion I1 mni, l.oL ' is ( hi sii r Mi.kimh II I I i MoRi.AN Nash iilllMIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIUIlii IIIIMIIIIIIIIII Alpha Tail Onie a .iiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiii ' j ii ' i : -=C 111 in«i « HnXOR ROLL Jamf.s N. Bird James Alan Bryden John Copeland Trayton Hooker Davis James Sheridan Hickey Leonard L. Kaffenbercer Raymond Brifton Lewis Joseph H. Martin Gerald Shfarn M( Williams Willi am S. Mi ddl e t on Howard Lornan Monser Charles Francis Moore Wellington C. Nichols Joseph F. Palmer Ernest John Prissinc, t EORC.E Rl ' SSELL PrYOR Robert Pyke Daniel Howard Steele Rk.hard W. Steele ( M MJ 1 1 s Yal man niiiiiiiiMMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniMiiiiMiiiiiiiiMinniiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiH Pan 40 1 tllllllllllllllllllllllllMIIIIMIIIIIIIIIItllllllllllllllltlllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII.. Siiztna Phi 7l(l i ,T.t, 10 1 Xkl ' hcirin Barpir Ciiindall Hickov CUrk NicLsim Linen Gilman Pnnsic Hall i-cht.Jdi Rccd Pickord Carver Richardson Callander l-ullctt A cr i ' i ' ; V ill Faculty Sriil ' llKN W ' ARRIiN Gil. MAN n 1 I ll K 1 N I ll( KOX Gbl)R(,l- M(MoMl-,s 1 II M Members in University I9IS ArIML R ClIARLliS N ' ltLSIiN Jdiin S iii ' vi (;r Linen 1 10 lolIN MoRt.AN ( :aI LANI I R )R. JuIIN W 1 li: M( Pill RRIN George; VVa.siiini.ion Ckanpai i Alhi-ri Knai ir N mi ihimieim La urence X aieriury Mail Ai iri d I Ienprk ks I avior I loRv i: joNi-.s Carver Piiii ii ' Huniiam Ri-.eii LiiiiiRiii l-RANK l- ' di 1 1- 1 1 Kim. Ri iiardson ( !llARI IS IM II 1 II ISMllN i iitMMitiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiniiimiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiMiiiitiiiiHiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiii Patt 404 lllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIUtlltlMllllllllllllillllllllirilllllll Si{ ' )ua PJii HONOR ROLL Robert Lynn Barcer Perry Baker Buchanan Ross VIarmon Carrell Stanley Richard Clacue Thomas Collier Clark Kenneth Curtis Dean Hole Thfooore Robert Hover Ralmi Burbank Johnson Rkjiard Francis Knoif Lowell Austin Leonarij William Pullman Lester Guy Asa Osborne William Butterworth Phillii s William John Pickard I£nwARn Oi.iLviE Prim.le Philip Kyle Robinson Wallace Temple ton • • « ' iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim,,,,,,,M,,,,,„„„„„„„„„„„„„„„„„„„„„| Page 40S MHinilllllllllMIIMniMMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIi Phi Siiitna Kappa l iinJt i al ta.isachusi-lls Agricultural College. lS7i WiAcvn.Mn. Zela Deulcron. I ' tl? Sumher of Vhafilers, iO liimc Mi-mbers. 4 S33 .illllllllllllllli: f f f f II 1 %% V ' ■ ' 1 1 % J fi %. % r 1 1 1 f % % K.;,t 311, 111 i.liiinuK I ImkUik ivoU lllliS ;!! M,.li.liti Moiloii L. Mv-i.-i c n M litTKnian J Slucbcr R, Mtirrisscy Craliol C Stucbcr Wilson E [Bergman Gcrmer Bctk ANchcnhrcncr WcMnli.il IVaJicx Kin I,. II Cantwcll Spiva Kerch Mcnihcis in I miiltx Eic.i-.M-; I i;npori Moldix l-KNN ' K UaKIIN MoKRISOV I Iakky Si fUvNuoc K I Iarolo Wilson Stkwart Mciiil ' cis in Itiitcrsiry Roi.iR (li.ii KIN (;aniwi;i.i, Howard C.dimns Grahoi Jul in Garvkr Ki.r h Raymdnd Pi MR MoRRissi.Y ll-L . l a i:L ( J Mi:s Ali RKD Pf.achf.v, Jr. Gr;oR(-.F. Josi;pn Silburna(.f.i.. Jr. Gkorck Hknry Stl ' eber CJIARI.I S I.IONARII KlMMAl 1 )r liL RUIN Walters Mel( her Iarrv I li (.(. Sdi 1 II I ARI Cj , s IIENHRI NIR I lim ARn I li HI Ri lii-.(.K HdWIN JaMM R liERc.MAN Miles Josi-jmi Bi rc.man |-RII)ERII. MoDRI CiERMIiR Lijwis William Morrlssey Maroll Loi is Morion EnWARD SlLHERN, .EL Geoi«;e Dewey Tmiisen I Iarry Li:Roy Wi sipiial C)s; AR l-RI 1)1 RIC K lsl-.NULR(. I IvRoLD James Kei.ley Pi MR GlIALMERS SiNNEN Don 111 I 1 1 R Smi 111 I hm-RT I AMHLYN Si ' lVA JiLiis John Siliher ( ' iii:siER I£vans Wii son mi iiilliiillillllliiMliiiiliiiilllllllMllllllilllilllllillllllllllilllllllllin llllllllllllllllll iMIIIIlHKIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIItlllllll) Phi S{{ ' ]?nci Kcippcj HOXOR ROLL Charles Edward Bradner Edward Lancworthy Blrwi:ij. iH,iAM Francis Codv Robert E. Currav ARTHfR EsPELAVD Edward (Collins Gratiot W ILBERT OlRISTlAV ( IeNTJRK.KS Elf. EVE Davenport Moloen Harlev Hopkins CjI STAF HeIMER LlNDREBt SSI V Valchn Loomis AnsLEY liRYAN Ml.CoNNEI.L Raymond Petir Morri.ssi-y ILL Alva Nl:i m Charles Alton Pimil Henry Miller Powi ll ArIIIIR HaRRLSON RortlNSON Karl AL ' (;tiST Sciimiot Ceor .e Joseph Sili-ernai.el, Jr. Hubert Tamblyn Spiva Howard Arthur Sikeforth WiLLIWI U KinLEV WaLLRK II iiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii? inn; MiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiliiiiiiMiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilllllllllllllliiiliiiiMiiiliiiiiiiilLi Alpha Sin ma Phi Foiindcii al Yale I nacrsily. IS4 Wucomin. Kii i iii, ' (W Sumber of Chaph-rs. 20 Livinf. Xh-mKr.s. -t 42i « I t I fll ' Schneider SpcnRlir C.ilJv ctmun clKuth I ' ich M.iiks Mcnch Nandtrbic Phelps Hiennan liaccn Pagcl Members in Faculty NoKMAN Cl)| IMUl S LlcAS Mcriihcrs iti Vtiiiersity 1916 Franklin James [iAcoN Charles Cl ' riis Brace Clarknci-: I Ifnry Henry Hlkman Gildermastir HoBART Valentine Hodge Harold Eugene Marks Herman Emil Ernst Pagel l l-) 1920 Karel C. Melaas Eugene Leslie McKinley Mench Roy John Pieh Erwin I 1i:nry Rihsam 1921 Kenneth Laiayette Astell Paul Fredi :h Doege Reginald W I Iammund (ji )r .Il MgKini I Joseph Patrick Brennan Albert James Henry Piiixi ' s. Jr. Kenneth Loyal Scott Silas Llewellyn Spengler Paul Farrell Tye RoscoE V ' anderbie f owARD S. Schneider Clarence Frederick Schubert Waldemar elguth Wallace Raymond Zimmi rman Karl G. Kilant) Hubert Lim.an Perrin Lincoln Abboi i S ii.lii r ;y Werner m illllllllHllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllMllltlllllllllllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Pa,r 40H lllllllllllllllll. i ' , Alpha S;V; ! ; Pl,i QO ' ,,-._ IIOXOR ROl L FiNXEv Baker David V. V. Beckwitm Carl Mermen Berger Donald I. Bohn Henry Harold Conlev Robert CoNRy D Disque WiLLARD L Fuller iLLiAM Edward Horn Raymond Edc;ar Horton Roland Arthur Ja obs in Clarence Albert Loeschep Wayland Oscood Harold Otto Pintiier EdU IN SaiMIDT Earl Eugene Smith t NALD William WmrE VIerton LaVIont W ' RiGiir Ulrich Rudolph Zuehlke ' ' ' ' ' ' ' . ...„■ ,.,„ Pott 400 iiiiiKiiiMllliiiir: iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiilliHiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiMiin Zeta Psi I ' ournU ' d at A ' fic York Univcnily, IS 47 V iiain.vn. l.amKla Psi. 1910 Sumker of Chablers, 24 l.nin-: Mcmhert. S 377 W H Pagp. Mctttbeis ill Fuculty ) AMI s I I. Al niN ' Mcnihii s in Initctsity I91S Kenneth Edward Baiie Evereit Carlylk Edwards Henrv Huson Blish Harold ' al ' .han |i)sr-i M RnxPORD ' ernon Leslie Klett Pomeroy Ira O. Sl(x;i ' mh 1920 Burton B. Bacley William Duncan Connor, jr Harold W . Billie Ralph Horion Pai l G. an Gent 1 21 loHN Bowman C.iiAi ' PLE Ralph Jourdan Kendall IDexier George B. Lilly Joshua Gf)WER Elder Iayidk 1 1. Seeher Wesley Tbavir ' itllMltllllllllllMIIIIMIIIUIMIIIIIIIIIIIIItlllllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIHIIIIIIIIMIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIl Pat ' I0 c alllllllllllllllllllllll. uiiiniiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiniiiiiiiMiMMiiiL: 7.cta si noXOR ROLL George Barker Nathan Beutell R R. Bragg Georce Carlson Melvin Leslie C hase Earl Currce Edwin Sharretts Elder Cyrus John Gatton ' El-Me- Otto HAHiirt r.ER ROLIIN Cl RTIS HAWKh_S Victor Hemmin -. Spenser Horner Austin Jeffers Charles Frkdfric Johnston William Kenneth Judevine Joseph Naiiian Mckin Lvman B, Park George Ricker George Sayle Kenneth Smiih Harold David Smith Pai L Van Gent James H. Walton Dean Watson niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiitiniiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiMiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiii Patf 411 ilMIIIIMIIMIIIIIIIIIIinilllllMMIIIIIItlli; ..llllllllllllllll. Chi Phi ■ I ' linJti a( Pnnci ' ton Lniivrxily, IS24 V, ixconsin. Ka i iu. ' ' . umhiT of Chafiters, 22 liimf: Members. tAOO LX-u Klu L.OUIU McuMon Brcyvogcl V. ai Johnson Statk Withcy i rumpl l:iurlinKiJinL- J. Rcidicrt HixlRins Uukcr Blftlcr I ' arrcll McCclvcy NiKliy HiBs.in Kickhofcr A Haakc Wallis Stone Crownhart Stropn: Taylor Mate Sl.chlcr Mol:cn Webb Thur loi Alired Pal ' l 1 Iaaki-. W ' ll IfAM I ll NRV KlI KMOl I.R LeROY JaMF-S BuRl.lNGAMr. Francis 15f:i.mar Hk.son III RBI Ri Mil I iR Baker Almi-; Lloyd Bruyvo ;i£L Jessi- Giorck Crowniiart Joseph liARM s Bi.a( m Carl William I ' arri-ll Ranoall Chase Goild John Aixjli ' h Bu.li-r }-Iowari Merton ( ikjmher Philip Hi-rs .hm. Ohwlinc. Members in Faculty AnA i ' L ' si: Mm, I n Ji)n LisiLR Ri 11 hi Ri Members in University A GfdRALO OaI ' M SrONE Allen Mc.Kinnon Slighter 1919 Edwaro I.Ol ' IS Del ' ss William John Haake Alered Newman Hel ' Ston Hermi-ri James Mat:en 1 20 (.jERALI) Bi Rl.H I lolX.INS Alvin Rietbrotk Klann Aaron John Ma ic Arihlr Reinhold L ' p;.ri.n 1921 C LYiiE Bi Riis Emery WiNi Rin EmviN Johnson Fr nk C ' iiapman Sharp Morion Owen Wiihey liRwiN Clarence Trl mpf George Earl Wallis 11 LI AM I Ienry Negley 1 Iarold Rolf Noer LoYD Morion S trope EnwARO George M( ( elvi Sidney Frederick Moody MowARD Bailey Siark Anhiony William Pi m h C.HESII R EmIL R|E( k Arthi R Chandllr I ' aylor iilllllllllMIMIIIIIIIIHIIMIIIIIillMlllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllltl Patf ' Illlllllilllllllllr: :JIIII!.llllllllllllllllltlllir iiiiiiMiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiruMiiiiiiiiiiiiilliii ' - Chi Phi IIOWR ROLL LirrLEBL ' RV Calhocin Allen Herbert Laflin Averv Allie Lloyd Breyvck.el Herbert Henrv Brown Neil Winthrop Brown Donald Hayne Crothers John Van Brunt Cox J. George Crownhart JuDsoN LeRoy Feloman John H. Helmar Northrope Jones Clinton M. Macolin Herman Ai.bi:rt Carlton M. Macioun Orville Wells Martin Leo J . QuASiciRocH Clyde William Reading Louis Byrne Slighter Pal ' l Schuster Taylor Philip Kingsland 55ghuyler Arlie Alfred Sghardt Allison Fendall H. Scott Gerald Daum Stone Lloyd Martin Strope Walter Ray Webb Ilsr.HKE TtllllllMIIIIIIIMMIItlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIilMlltlltlllllllllllillllllllllli 26 Patr 41 I ' iMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIillllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIII lllllllllllllllllllllltllliillllli:: Thetii Chi 1 ulh r K..a J,,.,-,.h-„, .J ll . Edwards C Johns un Matlox Jenkins Ruehl DodKC I ricss Schmidt Roberts lasLhc Mainland Langjahr Boorman Members in University William Cji;i)r .i-; Dokme yir Ned Royc.e Bllis Norton John Eversoll Ralph Friess Frederick illl m F-ihrmann NIS Abfabamson V Brdmann Marvin CLrPioRo Goll Cyrus Charles Thieme Clarence Ecbert Josephson Arno Robert Langjahr Wilhl ' r Herman Ruehl Harold A. Doik-e W ' lLLARD aLENTINE ErDMAN Iarold West Reed Erw IN George Sachse Kenniiih William Mainland John Demlhh Sii wari Abe Abraiiamson Ned Lewell Boorman Jay Walter C risi v Oscar A Ekllind Maurice Eugene Field Merwin Hayden Howrs Clari;nci-; Leo Johnson Melvtn Eddie: l.i ihir Terrell H Maxiield Ronald C ' lark Mattox Leslie William Iasche John GRnriin Wii te I AMES Hi ' Go Wi: .i;ni:r RuixiLPH CjiARLi;s Zimmerman itriiiiiiiiiiilillllllliinilitn MinilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMMIIIIIIIIMIIMinillllllllllllr JMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIItlllllllllllMllli .lllllllllllllllllllMMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIi: hcta Chi j- - ' . ,: ' - ' ' 15 ' -- l IIO.WR ROLL Flovd AoixBERr Amel Orvin Richard Brunkow Edward Hanson Connor Arthur Albert Erdmann Leroy E. Edwards William H. Eiler Robert Andrew Grashorn J. Bernard Johnson Lyel NiiWfON Jenkins Howard Johnson Basil Frank McKenzie Dewey Vanard Nelson Elmer Clarence Priewe Arnol V. Roberts E, Walter Roth Edward G. Sievers Arno John Schmidt Julius William Wenstadt TllllllHllllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIilllllllMlin iiiitiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii: Delta Phi Epsilon lounJcd at isconsin ' ' 6 t I f f t I % Bcrgsct urbcrg Scott FalstaJ Cioffman ClaJdcn Sommcr Hu tinK Baker Ksch Hoppcrt ?pctt l lulcur Kcllord B««c . i ' m i ' r.? in Faculty Huc.o H SoMMl R . c;n c ' ;.v ;i (rii ' i I ' r.viry John Lcx;an Nf.wman Howard JosKPH Hancock Hugo Henry Sommer Glenn Eoward Moore Armand Joseph Tl ' teur Arthir James Kralovec 1919 Lloyd liERciSET Carl Arihir 1 Ioitert Clarence Henry Falsiao 1920 Arthur Ende Brice Brown Howard Holion Baki.r C.erhard Wilhi lm I.orield I Iarlan Geor(.e Groievian LiN ;oi.N Andrew Qi arberc. Owen I.e CJrand Storr 1921 Alfred I Ioward C ladden Frank Jom ph Spi i iel OsWAI D I-. Kl 1 1 I R ' IIMtllltllUUUItlllllllllllllMllllllllllllllinilMlllllltlllllllllllMII ' I ' a,. 41 • IIIMIIMIIIIMIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIirilllllr: .iiliiiiniiiiHiMiiiiHitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiL: Bcltci Phi Epsilon HONOR ROLL Kni t Hoegh HOUIK Arthur James Kralovec James Leroy Lacy FiNLEY F M RtlV Glenn Edward Mo irf. Myrl Lei: Oliver W ii.LiAM n RriD Benjamin Wood I lim-ARD Lester Zettlkr TlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMlliiiiiiiiiiuilii illlllllllllllllllllMllllllllllllllllllMlllilliiiiiiiii • iMdiiiitniiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiii: ;:iiiii(iiiiiiiiiiii. Lambda Chi Alpha l-oun.Ud al li ' .slon I niicrsily. I9(N W Uconsin. Alf ha licla. 1 17 Sumbcr of Chapters, 41 Livim . UmKr.s. 2.1 Si Sthoh: Lan Jtin an IiTmun ancutl NiRlmnKalc L, LillinBion Millet Hitchcock A bllinnx r Mciiil ' crs in t ' tmilty Ronsi Y Hii ii;MORi-; Baucock Guy Shimer Cook .Mcrtihvrs in ( ' riiicr.v fy ;9 v Rk:IIARI FlStHER CjRANLR Loi ' is Van Ermen Charles Raihman Bennett Kesneih Newton Fenn Harolii Manoel Field Herbert George Freese Morris Lee Hitchcock Arvin Belioro Ellingson Alvah Charles Elliott Frank Severance Hayes yp Q l ' i20 JohSj J. Oberly Bertram H. Plerner Byron Clk-eord Langdon ' Iheodore Livingston Scholt: John Elden Lee Stewart RoswALL Eloe He wet t Frex erick William Oldenhl ' rc. Lester Swancutt Elureo Ji ' Nius Ellini.son 1921 ElHMN F ' raN IS DUFIY lUIMIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIinilllllllllllHIIinilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltllllli I ' at ' IllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllimillllllllllUl. illlllMMIIIIIIIiillllllllllllllllllllllMII ' . ' Lambda Chi CAlpha HOXOR ROLL Stacey Lewis BROw i William Arthur Clark Hkrbf.rt George Freese Gilbert Georci- Grieve Leonard Marion Johnson Herbel Arthur Lance Harry Ira Miller Wii 1 I AM Isaac N ' i .hiin(;ale riiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii! III! iiitiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiitiiiiiiiiiiiiti Tau Kappa Epsilon FounJcJ at llUn.iis -sU- n Lnncrsily, 18 )9 Wisconsin. LumKla. 1 17 Stimher of Chapiters. II I irin- M.-nil-tTr 61 %%%%%%% Wolf Zcllmcr Williams Wolfram II limns Hcr:fclJ Smith Bricklaucr Uclhki: Muktki-r li l-icdlcr Aril-crBcr K. l-icdlcT llmimrliiiK Shcmick Ciillmann D. Uil Members in Faculty John N. I.(i f Mem hers in I ' tiixersity I9IS LvniAN Pai L Gl I IMANN JiLiL ' s Al ' c;lsi Wdi.i ram Fkank W II I jam SiiiMK k John i bsti r ii i jams Mil KIN CxVDt ZliLLMtR CORNIiLIL ' S I-Ri:miRlCK ArZEJI-IU I R OaRWIN HlROV liRL ' NS Roland Mariin BEiiiKii Hilnry Brlns Benjamin Gkorge Brickhaui-r William Rk maro Mali i kar I Iunry Nk iioi as Woll hi 20 I Ians Fhi 1)1 rii k Iimmi-rlini. liLMORr W ' aijlr Film i r Rk hard Piiiii II ' I Ii;r:i I in 1921 Rai i ii Fii:i)I.i:r I li rman Pijtr Sii hkln 1 f-H. ' i- ' iililllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli- llliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiih I I niiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiitmiitiHiiiiiiiiiiii: n au Kappa Epsihv} HO.WR ROLL Henry Thomas Binney Lloyd Fit:Gi-.rald Frfx) M. Smitvi ' ' ■■ ' ■ ' ' •■•■■ ' ' ■•■ ' ■•■iii ' iiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiimimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii, iiiiiiii ■u 421 MllllMIMIIIIIItlllllllllllllllllMMIIIIIItlllilMlllh IllllllllilllllllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllC I ' r, fr-Mnn;,l I cc;. ' Im Phi Delta Phi Foufii ii al Ihc L nncrsity of Mithtfian. IStt ' W i.sionsin. I larlan Chaf lcr Ifl ' l umher o Chaf li ' rs, 4t Living Mc-mhcrs. I2.0iil Frank I Boi-sel Stepiiks. ' Warrln Gilman Arnold Bknnkt r Hall Fratres in haciillate {BfnchiTs al the Inns oj Court) On the oolsack 1 Urrv Sanger Richards Oliver S. Rundell loiiN Bfll Sanborn 1 loWARD l.ISLII. SmiIH Harold M. W ' ilkie William Herbert Pai.u RouEBi JoiinClnningham ppunliii ' lit ) • lini (it ((iiirt Inner Temple. I lf Ri ' ssi-LL Lowell Johnson Clarence Fred Wmiiten Nathaniel Palil Biart J. FVANS Barnett 1 lARfM n MvKoN Lancer Mtddte Tempte. 1919 RoBERi Li-ROY Peters I lARRt W II I IAM RiLI.V Wallace Thaler KiNNEIII SlDNI V HUE Pai ' L 1 1 Cdnwav Outer Tempte. 1920 WiLi IAM ] Hay, Jr. Romeo Cli ' Hii.s Laus i ' ItlllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMllllllllllllllllllllll iiiKiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir llllllMllllllllllllillMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUirillMIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIItllltlllli:: hi Dcha Phi Ellsworth CIhapman Alvord MoROAN Mtl ' XisAM) Anderson Stl ' art ALrRi.D Disiiop Harl Francis Bi how CjtoRi.i; CUrkv Byron Josi-pii C-arpknter William Harold Collette Leon F. Folev James Robert Frawlev IIOXOR ROLL BliRNARD RoBKRr CJl.l-.ASON Aliri-.o Lai ' ri-.n .i-: Godfrey Raymond Thomas Jackson Elmer W I.i i-ckir John Harrison McQiaid Glenn Eli lh M( I li (.11 Robert William Monk Carl Edler Porter Philii ' Rohinson Philip GoLDiR Sanborn Karl Aiif.isr S iiMinr Kenni-th Bli ME .Smith Mel ille a. Smith C tj Ri-Nr.E Fred Whipfen Irvin a. White J. Arthur W ' k.kham I loWARD ZeTTELER ■1 HiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiMiiiiiiiHiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiMiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiir; Pat ' 42 I UillllltlllKllltllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIiril lllllllllllttllll! Alpha Chi Sin ma I ' l ' iindcd al L ' nncrsily of W iMoiuin. I 02 Wi.vcvn.wn, Alf ' lHi CluipU-r l ' i()2 XumK-r n C ' iu i iti, J } I lotlcbcrs Hickey Miller Lan: Stone V . Smith Slorcr Bithkc Fri r-« Williams HcnninKs. Wiirner SlaiJI I luKcmann Fahlbcrtf Jchrenk U.cch Kills I lt Imci Shcpai . Schmidi Giitm Wakefield loMerude lUlis lircnncr Oesurk d Nicholb KleimenhaRcn I IcppM-rt HaROLI ( loKM 1 U S liRADLI 1 Albiirt Brann Richard [-is iir:R towiN Bi;Rr 1 Iart Otto Louis Kowalkk Francis C raic. Kralskoi i- yiviubers in Fucttlty I ll NR1 An, LSI LaN(.AMI N ( HARi.i;s Kknnkth Li.iiti Victor Lkniirr Rkh Sianislal ' s M {;aki 1 ry W ' aLTF.R NliBtL John Xavifr Neumann W i MR Piir W ALiiiR TiihoooRi; Smri-.nk 1 ll-NRY Alc.ist S( III ' KTII- JoHN f Ienry S:HMmr I Harry Steenbock IImil Trloc Stanton L ' MBRni A VRiiN Martin Hac.emann Joseph Francis Oesterlb tLMER Louis Sevringhai ' S Mctnhcrs in l ' ni crsity Craduatv Damp W ii.liam Mlm HosMER Stone Martin Otto Iosteri ' d Merle Starr Nichols NoRBi.Ri RouERi Mlelli-.r Garvin Williams Wallace Heaoen Strowd Neo 1£llis [-Irnsi DAVin Fahlberc Ralph Fbiess Clabenc I-. N B Hatlebi.r ; F ' liii.ii ' John I Iickey ( ARLETON I IeNNINGSEN Karl C Kleimenhacen Elmer Otto Kraemer Richard Milton Siori-r C ' hesti:r Flmer Shei ' ari Paul Herman S hmioi Harold Frani is Wakit ti i i ( jiARLi;s Law arni :r John Wesley W illiams Ohio J At 111 i;s I ' Ri-t ii Roland Mariin Beiiike AlVIN C ' .HARLIi BraUN Frwin C.iiARLtvS Brenner 1919 I Iahoi D ( owan Cjieeiham Milton I- mil tJRii m Priesh.y Dixon I Ii lmis Carl Ariihk I Ihiti ri Ariiu R Lan: JosEi ' H Arnold Staidi ( TiEsri R Josi;i H MlLI 1 R ' iMKMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIItlllli illlllllllllllli iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiir .II IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIHIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII ' - CAlpha Chi Sii ' .ma t iuikiji,a|- Ai, p HO.XOR ROLL Carl Austin George VIarstens Bishop Van Loren Bohnson Paul WiiirriER Carlton Charles Clifford Edward Hardy Carl Hayden George Heise Rlssel Jdmnson Joseph Howari Mathkws Edmund Miller Oyvind Juul Noer Ralph Ramsay Joseph Rkinhardt Albert Ameil Schaai- Georof. Robert S u L. I. Shaw- James Sykora Howard DpAVitt Valenttine James Henri Walton Otto U ' ifjie Andrew Wollin Robert X ' ernon Williamson William John Zick nlllllllllllllllllllUillllllllllllllllllllllllllllMMIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIilllllillHIIIIIIMIIIIIIIillllllllllllllilillllillllllllr Pat 4IS illMinilMIMMIIIIIiniMIIMIIIMMIIIIMMIIIIIIII: IIIIIIUIIIIIIIU Phi Alpha Delta l-oui di t al orlhticsliTn L nnvr. ity, 1X97 Vi.sc. n.(in. Ryan, 190-i Xumlvr cf Chaf U-r.y }7 l.itmf Mrmhcrs 4.S00 IVinky IXilt IJultir Hiodv lifapor ball- Walhs blctlcland |-.m Mcnilici ill I iHUlty John Gordon McKay Mcitihers in I ' riiicisiry l.AWRKNcr; JoriN Brody ROBF.RT FiZRDINAND EwERS John Gross, Jr. John Gordon I :Kay Ira Otis Slocumb Jamks Richard Wilkinson Carl Edwin Behnke Emmeti Joseph Conley Roy Martin DeWitt John Logan Newman I iERMAN Ray Salen Hi;nry Ai.heri Bri ns Earl Roy Butter Joseph Pomiard Duei- Timothy Frank Ec.an I Ieruert Frederic Graper ii.i.iAM Petir I Ianson Francis Delmar Hicson Oscar Bernard Sletteland William Edward Walker Harry George Wallis Warrin Ciri;g(. Wheeler • iiiittiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiHiiiiitriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin IJIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIilllllllllllllllllllllllli .:IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIII - Phi Alpha Delta - HO. OR ROLL FrRD ANDF.RSfJN HoMi-R A Bknton Glv Bi ack l-AWRiiStt J Bhiidy Gkorc.F- E Brown STASLrv E. Beers Cornelius Conway Arthlr Crowns Robert Curran Frank Dalev Harry C ' [ ean F Ryan Dieev TlMorHY Ff.AN Howard T Foi i ki s l.oi IS F Famrion Edwaro a Gehl I Ik.m Go ; .ins Herhert F Graper Wii.i.iwi P f Ians in Fred Ii. ;me:s Henry A Joiin ARnnjR Kleinpell Clarence A. Keeley I lr:RMAN ZlS IIKE Theodore Lewis J. Gordon McKay Harry Meissner Peter A. N ' ai ie :inski C. J.Otjen Arthur Pellette Earl H Pottinger William Pors Lesier V. Raeder Bailey Ramsdell (JLENN Ramsdell McKeriel Rn[x iF Harry V. Rohinson Walton Smith Herman Salen Ira O SLoci ' Mn NoRRis Stoltie Glenn W. Stephens Pai:l Taylor R I i Thurwaechter LoREN TlRlRWAEClirER John C ' roft Toohy V1alc;olm H. Whiie nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllMIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIilllllllllllllllllUUIIIIIIIMIIIIIln iiDiiiuiniiiiMiiHMitiiiiiiiMiniiniiiiiiiniiiiiiii Civil LnKinccnnR rratcrnity Triiui}rlc I ' oundiU at Lnnvrsily of Illinois, 1 07 VhapW. ? urnl-cr r ' Vhat-U-r-. I I nuu: Members. 7l : ■ I f I f J oint.i. ),l W,- ,ll V.ulUlo li.i;c;j 1 li....t . UUij.i iiilt- . 1 liihn Hull Bchrtn Conaty Ki ch Wicpkinfi Quimby Kiddir llulhurt Fislxck McAlcir Ucnn s Mcisclwitz Smith Nelson A i ' m h ' .v I Faculty John (jURNey Callan JI.LIAM Sl ' AULniS(i KiNNI Daniii. W r.HSTF.R Mead Leonard Sewell Smith Mctrihcrs in Vriitcrsity Joseph Gardner Bi.nm.i i Bernard Mariin ( onaiy Charles Edwin Dennis, Jr. Henry Herman Gumprecht Harold John Hosler ' ' ) Ray Emil Behrens Finley Leland Fisheck I- RANK KaKSAR LoL ' is Adoli ' h Kirch James Rohert McAteer Adoi PH William Meiselwit: PiiiLii ' Harold Smith Herbert Glaettli Henry William Klrt: ' in :ent CJEORc.E M( Graw Claire C. C-oni.don John Wissley Hall Charles Pomeroy Kidder Arthl ' r Oliver Olson Frank K Qlimhy Lai RENCI-: 1 1. Hahn Leonard Kanard ARfiiiiR R. Len ;k I ' ilO Itll LiAMS Raymond Sherhlrne OWICHT Hawtir)rne Smles Warren W. Walters PtIER Walraven C. Armin Wiei ' kinc. Elmer Frederic Nelson tji.oRr.E Frederick Schubrinc; K ni Louis Zanders i.lllllMIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMilMIIIIIMIIItllHMIIIIIIIMIIIIIli iiiillillllMinilllltUHIIIIIIIIIIlr: iiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiililliiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniMiiiituiiiiinniiiMiiiMiiniriiiiiiiiiiiuinirMrMiiMiiiiMitfniiiiiiiii: Triangle HO OR ROLL Alexander Frldkrick Bodenstkin Harold Frederick Mielenz W ALTER Frank Grubb Frederick N. Schustedt iLtiAM SPE fCER Johnson Rrnest Henry Schwartz Herbert Overton Lord Arthur F. Peterson illlllllllltltlllllllllir; 27 .iiiiii[iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:tniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iii;iiiiiiiiliiiiiilliiiiiiiii Pr..k-.-i.,n.il McJk.,1 I Phi Beta Pi l-oundcJ at I nncrxtlx of Pillshtirfh. IS )! Mi ' ha n, •• ' umKr . ' f Chul UT.s IS ' f I f ' t- ' H- f f ' Malonc Aylward R.iKrts Swanson Schmiiz McDcrmuii Li Stolzi- livcrsf ll KoKcr ndson Van Dc T BcrR [ ipcr C White Kln nan M White Scaric nhart Jack-on TcLindi- Ka% C hipman Bor ack Richdorf Schncidc L.annjahr i: ans (ir ccn WcKr Jan lev Rvan Slmp n Members in Faculty Harold Cornulius Bradllv Pi;r(;y DAWsf N Rix.iNALD Jackson Ariiiir Solomon Lolxlnhari Julian Ylrkls Malonl W L 1 1 R JosLPH Mllk U-Liam Snow Milllr Lawrln .e Fran is Rkiidori- Thomas Tormuy Mark riDWARn Ryan Carl C ' .ari ' lnilr Slarli ' I ' lioMAs J AMLS Aylward Karl 1v si ' lr B(irsa(.k J AMLS Amurosl Bvans NoRioN John Evlrsoll alti:k LLi.mlr Griirn Francis Risii J annly Frank ( yri nls Kinsman C JIARLI :s Lakoii- ArN(J ROHLRI LaN(.JAIIR Mcliil ' iis ill I iiiM ' i sity (.i.j. iiurt- Rii HARD Wise I I li I.indl I IS Sami iL Alirld Ml Ri ' in Hlrbiri Waltij StiiMLi: Edward Frank S mnlidkrs EuLR Edward Simpson, Jr. JosLPii Arill Stolzl J AMLS Jay Swfndson JLLiAM loiiN Van I ln Blrg Marci ' S Dl Will I l: (.ll rland Jamls Mill-: WiLLARD Ali n:o CIiiipman GloRCL I llNRY I IoYI-.R Francis Edward Mt Hi rmoit PuRt.LLL William I ' ii ' lr E:ra I Ia:i.lion Rix.lrs Roil Roy Rohi;ris C4.I ARY Ni IL SwANStlN C!ari |osi I ' ll lulr ii ' i ' •iiiiiiiiiiiuillllllllllllllitiiiti;iiiiiiliiiiiiiiiilllltlititiiliiilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllillliiM|i I ' att 4fO giiimiliiiiiiimiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiMiiiiniiiiiiMiii iiiiiin iimmiiiiiiiimmiiiiiiimimimi: ' Phi ' Beta ' Pi HOXOR ROLL Wll LIAM MiODLETON Hi NRY PaI.ENKOPF Francis Joseph Morris josppii iscent Tayi.. Ci-AIR Odin in .om illlilllllllllllllllll illlMIMIIItllMIMIIIIIIIIIIIintlttnilltlllllllllllllllMMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIillllllllllinilMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIII ' - Alpha Gamma Rho Foiindid at Ohio University. I ' i04 XCiscomin. Iota. ' J O Xumber of Chapters, 12 l.nm Members. ,SSO Wails arnty bhcpaij lish biliMibon Voi.Lwi,.. ii-. r Bcnkcrt Krvlin Rilcy Lurvcy J Brann Davis Scliafcr Donohuc Toepfer R oss Stranahan Stanbury W. Walker Banta HatlchtrB A. Brann Biery C. Walker Mctnl ' crs in Faculty John William Brann I Iarlow Llslie Walster John (jiarl(;s W ' alkf.r I Iarlly Frost Wilson Mem her. 1 in Vniversity Roy Frhderick Benklri incf.nt [iarl Kivlin Dlane, CkiswoLD Owis N ' erne Vincent arney Clarence Nels Bl ' (.c;e Haileherg W ilijam Allen Walker 1919 Eldyn Everett Van Lone Gordon Hastings Siiepard Leonard John Mulrooney Frances Perlt Sfhtor RoBERI O.ILVIE StaNBL ' RY 1920 Raymond Earl Donohue John illi am I (x :ii 1921 Fri DERUK OAVin Bu RY Arcmie Fletcher Simonson Harold Franklin Li rvey Ben Farrand Stranahan Milion Glernsey Walls ' IHIMIIItlMllltUIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIinilllllllllllllllllllllMlllllilllllllllllllKlllll illllllllllllllllllllllll JIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIMIIIMIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMMIMIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIinilllllll llllllinilllllMIIIIIIIIKIIIIIIIH:- AIpJui (jcuiuuli Rlu: HOXOR ROLL Norton Travis Ames Harry McLaughlin Baldwin Geo rge Ve ' -ne Bavta John Ellsworth Belden Stanley Raymonx Belden Andrew JofiN Brann Howard Jonathan Brant Edw. Lancworthy Blrwell. Jr. Edward David Cahoon John Walter Campbell William Walter Campbell George Anthony Chandler Hlch Franklin Conrey Albert Charles Fiedler W ' akri-.n Lol is Fish Edward Gratiot James Hamrleton Edward Hopkins Kenneth Mosi.ey Krlley Joseph Torbitt Mengel Timothy Asbi ' ry Pidlev Maxwell Edward Riley Herbert Hi ' go Rass E. Walter Roih Edward William JynixLiNG William Walderhach Stanley Wanier Li? oN Gilmore Weed niiilliliiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiMiiiiiiiuiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiMr; Patt 41) d iMnMiiiiniiniiuiiMMniniinirtuiniuiiitinMnininiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiunnnirniMMniniiMMiitiitiiiiniiiniiiiiitiiiir- Gamma Tail Beta h.ntnJc.i ill Ifc I nn r ,| .. tt .u.-ruin, Hit- Plcxif:in£ Chof tcr iV ' ii Hho Sif mn. Chat tfr Gamma. Rush MeJual School. Chicugc lr ) ;ncr Pucstuw KcichciL Ticincy Cole Cochcms Millard Oitn Mitchell Conncll Oxin Slack Tillman Johnson L ' hl Honorary Member s i Ahim. K 1 h I IV li S. M D. Mvtiihcrs in Factilty John Aur.iNT Hn(.limi Hynti H. B 1 1 J Members in l ' ni%crsity Graduate Li-SLiK MacNauc.hton ( TTo Peter Diedrich Camilles (V.den Dpi i-:r Harold Macomhkr Coon ARTHI- ' R ViNCIiNT C OLM John William Ojnnell NiCHOLAUS Stanislaus JoHi Edwin C Baoj Kemnlth Coaii Ms l£.DwiN J } Kherland J. CiLAtRI- HaRMAN Rn LAND I IaROI.D AROILR ti n Cartlr Bormann Mirri I i wLLL Campiu.i l9tS Robert Louis Gii-aian Paul Li-o Hi-i ty Georoe Howard Irwin 1 19 John William Martini Jami_s Henry Murphy PREACOTT TaLMAN MiTCI iiin V IvRN M |a Mts 1 llTTNIiR i; DVl N D VIcKiNi Av R .K. E 15 ln.l NSM.Wl Mill l ' )2l Ni Carpi-nti R lY Sy M Y J..11SS..N Bernard Parker Mluxkn Sylve-ster Stephen Stack A 1 1 en Smith Watson John F-rancis Tilleman CLARt Jci-: Keislin . SaiAFPEft Robert Stan more Vivian Karver Louis Pliestow Lrwin GEORr.E Seyhold Edward I redi:rick Tierney Lawrence Wiliiam Griu.ory Ai VAH Lay NEwa MB MMUIIIIIIlllllMtintllMlltlllllMllllllinnillllllllllltllllllMIMiniti; Pat€ 434 .iiiiiiiiiuiiiiiniiiiutiuic MiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiitiiiiniuitiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiitiriiiiiiirtiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Gamma Tau Beta linWR ROLL Leo John Bachhuber Allard Verne Frocner V ' oLNEY Bernard Hyslop Roland Akiiil k Jai.obson Henry Augustus YeovMans Charles Grafton Weller illlilllllllllillllliii) IIIMIIilllllllllllllllllltllllllllllllllltMttlllllllllUIIIIIIII HUii i.iiiiiMi;i4(ii(ti niiitiiii!iiiii:iitiiiiriiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiii; Pn (c Mi niil linKinccnnR jjnJ Sticrncc rriiicrnuy Theta A FounJcJ al Rcn.saclacr PolyUxhnic Inslitiil-. hS64 l.ninf. Members, i ' ' ( ' Van Slytk I .n lur Bcllack I urnc.iurc Slake Marihall Mantonya Buckliulin I ' ouir.mr Alhtr Miii?c KottI 1 lascnpIluK Bohina Members in Fuculty FrLDIiRIC K lilt.KNH TlRM:. 1 Rl- ( MAKLIS l l-;S C.ORl ' Erni:si Oi lo l- N .i Members in University Ariih r Oi 1(1 F. Bh.hholiz Carl pRtDERic Kottler ErNI.SI BENF.DiC;! MORSF. W ILl ARI) Rl RMIARD Bi:l.l.At;l Hp.rman Addm ' h Bi.AU Walter Edward Blowney George Gordon Fraier Maurice Miller IIansos ' John Leroy Hasenpelii; Willis Bacmelder Clmminx.s ROLLAND I loRAIIf) MaXSON JAMIS D. . I(( ' oNNEIL 1919 1 20 William Glorgl; Mamonya Ori;n 1 Ieruert Marshall Rl ssELL Edward Plerner William Rohert Steele CJLENN Barton Warren Lawrence P. Works Frederick Stewart Tl ' rni:aL ' RF. Don X ' alenhne Slaker I. oris Wi II iM.ioN an Slyck RoHERT Bruce Bohmann Earle Kroncke Owen Rom R I I erry William Zam:ow C.I (iRi.i Zamzow iMnlliH.iHW.IilltlllUlinUliilJilllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllir Pat ' 4 it, iilililliiiiliilillliiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniitiiiiifiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiitiiiuiliuiiiiiiiiiicuiuiiiiiiiiiiiL: ' T ]]ct:a Xi HOWR ROLL Walter Leland Albers Everett Lelan ' d Colf Charles JAMES Goldammer Ravmonx) Clarence Hartlni. AsHER Esaias Kelty loKN Nicholas Kelchel Cleve a. McMullen Lucius Byron Nash Richard John Oetjen Clarence Albert Pottincer Roy W ' illmer Redin Thomas Dewey I ' aylor Kenneth Frederick Whitcomb illlllllllllillllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIMIi ' Pa,, .(I- Fraternities In the orihr ol lluir K.slahti. ' .lmHnl at llu- Lniivrsily. Phi IX ' lta Thcta . Beta Thcta Pi . Phi Kappa Psi C:hi Psi . . . Sigma C hi . Delta L ' psilon . IXIta lau Delta Phi Gamma Delta Theta Delta Ghi Psi Upsilon Kappa Sigma . Phi Kappa Sigma Sigma Nu Alpha IXlta Phi Sigma Alpha Epsilon Delta Kappa Epsilon Acacia . Alpha Tau Omega Sigma Phi Alpha Sigma Phi Zcta Psi Chi Phi . . Phi Sigma Kappa . Theta ( hi . Delta Phi Epsilon Lambda ( hi Alpha Theta Kappa Epsilon t-.20 022 811 150 630 ev44 Iti 521 150 222 621 614 625 640 627 524 615 225 106 619 104 635 211 148 630 271 705 Lake Street Mcndota Court State Street Iota Court Lake Street Frances Street Mcndota Court North Henry Street l ngdon Street Lakelawn Place Lake Street Langdon Street North Henry Street North Henry Street Lake Street North Henry Street Lake Street Lakelawn Place Prospect A e Lake Street Langdon Street State Street Langdon Street W. Gilman Street Langdon Street Langdon Street West Johnson Street Professional Fraternities Phi Delta Phi. Legal . Alpha ( hi Sigma. Chemical . Phi Alpha IX-lta, Legal . . . Iriangle, Civil Engineering Phi Ikta Pi, Medical Alpha Gamma Rho, Agricultural Gamma Tau Beta. Medical Theta Xi, Engineering olo Lake Street 308 Huntington Qiurt 271 Langdon Street 1015 L ' nivcrsity Avenue 224 North Murray Street 1530 I ' niversity Avenue H(I8 L ' nivcrsity Avenue 428 Murrav Street nd Ink Sketches for ihc Frattrntty 1 diaun h MaJelyn SlanchfidJ. ' JororitiCvS l!llll!IIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIinilltlllllllllli llllllllllllllll! Kiippd Kappa Gamma Wi.iaimm. ija. IS7} . iimhvr of ChafUTS. 40 l.i Kii Ikmis Pctky Nines Suul Hutkr Knm-r Surlo Conklin H.,.«n Vinjc R ;hin-un Mel Icnry Piittcr-c.n 1iin-..n Muipl ' Wil K,.« Dick Clancy Ucatly Warren BicKrman fhiiniK-rlain Ualli Doris Cariir Ai.ii.i-. BiMis DoRoi HY Grace Brown MaR(.ARI-I C HAMBRRl.AIN Marion Lislii: C lan .y A ' rn « ' r.« in Faviilty Mciiihcrs ill I riivcrsity P .V I-RANC.I S Mll.ORKD Enx.I.R Mary )osi-.phine Ferciison Ai.K.K ' an Patten Kin(. Horoihy Loomis Annie M P] iman I li.i.i.N Ulizabeih Parkinson Mary LLliza Porter Marcjaret Ann Robinson Elizabeih Nancy Wilson 1919 Florence Beamy Marion Eliiabeth Fay Biiriha Elc.enia Ocitsner Lucille Bieberman Dorothy Adelaide Krle(.i ' r Marc.aret Irene Peierson Lalireita Bii(.iiER C .onklin Mary McHenry )i:an Patterson Mavis ( jiibb C ' atherine Olivi;r Mlnson Ll ll Esielle SalI. Mildred (Campbell Evans Brynhilde Josephine Mlrphy Alice; Rinij Van Hise Clara ' ii rlin(. Fai ' erba( ii Mar(;aret Warren 1920 Janei BiiLER Mary Ella Fer(;iison EdiihShea MaR(.AREI I )R0IIII a( RMCIIII I. CoNSIANC i:PlERREPONT NoYES ElHEL ViNJE Helen Mai- Dh k Ri hi Ai if i Peti.ey W inii ri d Wali.is l-oi ' iSE Ai.i.YN Annie I.ai ' RII- f Ioard M ry |it ia Parkinson Mary Farrand Bi.ooix.ixid Mildred Ki isi-i.man lii i vnor F ' arri i l Rii i y MaJI L RlI ' Ll Y lire KSIAI I l.ol ' ISI Ma( lADDl N (.NI S SaRI IS Rachii. SriHERLAND ( loMMiiNs DoRoiiii A Dri ' mmond M I.M RiN Kmhirini- Kay Siroi: l K I I nlll V §«=3r= MItlMltlltllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllKIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII ' ,.«f 4 411 iiiiiiiilllllllltlllllllliiiiir; liiilllllliiliiillllllllllllll IMIMIIII liMlllllliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiii iiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiillliiiiMitiiiitiMiiiiitiinr-j Kappa Kappa Gamniu iit - ...fy Jf .r: ' 1; ' L . c i_..lLf -£-- ff -. ' b --Zi.nr.-.-iuii C::-iJi- ' TIID _rn IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIM illlilllllllllMlllllllllllllilllllllllillllliiiiiiMIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIHMIIIMIIIIIIIII Po« 441 MiiiiniinnilllllMIIIIMIIIIIIIIIirMIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIMIIIIIIMIIIi: IIIIMIMIIM): Delta ( Mil nun (I rouniLJ at L ' nivcrsity oj Mu uaj pi, IS72 iisconsin. Omega, IS SO umher of Chapters, 29 I irirc LmKr.s. • ? Brown Candcc Staples BriKK I loiton Simpson Clatk Johns in Gray Saw cr Blaul Roust Hahn Ely Frickc Bollman Kucppcr Radford Wrifthi Iirickson ( olvin Wuerptl Warner ' aughn crriv Sumner Remkmg I lead Kitig I t.iver Ramsay Hosmer Jo Miss Kathlrinc Allen- Miss Cornelia Anderson Mvmhcrs in Fainlry Miss LjI RliU 1)1 .S| I 1 I rv Mrs. Thomas Coleman Miss Mary ( omsto ;k Miss Mary Foster Mrs. Lois K. Mathews Frances F. Bacon Fredrica H. Atwood Mari B illman Jessio Colvin Ann Brigcs Inathryn K. Brown Lillian M. Clark Elizabeth Blanche Ferrey Ethel Fricke Helen Joan Cray Lee F. Bacon Sophie Blaul Elizabeth C. Canoee Bertha Blaul Marjorie I Iall Mcnihcis ill I ' riiwi sity iiraititatc 191 S Anna Ely Gertrude Erickson Margaret Eraser 1919 Elizabeth Reed Head Katherine Jones F-LORHNCI-: Harriet King GrEICHEN Kl EI ' I ' ER Ruth Radpord Slisan B. Ramsay 1920 Rose L. Hahn Lai ' ra 1 Iorton Ri ' iH E. Johnson 1921 Hilda Mably P.VULINE Pabst Kaihryn S iimi deman Jean Sharps Margaret C. Hosmer EsTELLE J . Sawder Irene F. Staples Margaret B, Reinkinc Mary V. Rouse Dorothy K. Simpson Catharine C. Sl ' mner Mai RiNE X ' aughn C ORNEI lA W ' rU.HT Ada B. Kroening Marion Warner Lois W ' l I rpel Mildred S II WARTZBiRG Riirii SioRMS iiiiiiiiiiniiiMiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiKiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiuniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiMiiiiiiiiir: Pair 442 llllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIMIIIIillllllllllllllMIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIillllllllllMIMMIMIIIMII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIII|ltlM(l(IIIIMIIinrill : n elta Gamma S%fe - iiMiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitn Paf 441 illlllllllllllllllllllll l|!Mi!ltlllMniHltlMIIIIMIIIUnilllMlllinillltlllll)lltllllltllllUIIIIII!IIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIilllllll|l. Gamma Phi Beta Nuzu [ akin Fisher Ion ■s Caldvi ill Mabis Wallrich Stcc Hdlcv Walton Gcr mcr Mahcr Biivcc i crpcr Davis ( ' oat.rs l.uvcll Hundv RicharJ Acnes Boeing Members in Faculty 1 IrirN I.ANi.i K ESTELLE HaYDEN X ' erena M. Baker Katherinf. Mary Bindy Marion Evelyn Davis Helen McKie Davis Marion Fern Boyce Mary Sterling C ' larke Eleanor Fairchild I ana Florence Deacon Eleanor Fisher Carol C oates doroiiiy c )eri ij Janet I5i rrie Aline Elizaheih Elll Florence Finneri ' ii Inda Mora Bell JF.AN Ford Etmei (jRAI e Members in Iniicrsiry Graduate Ar.NES Dlrrie I9IS Ielen Rose Dodd Marjory- ETr YRE Gertrit)e Emily Germer Irene I Ielen Jones 1919 Dorothy Konraoine Flnk Ji LiA Goei:e Ri;na Hedoles Evangeline Maher MiRAiiiLLE Nei hi:r vooi-) 1920 Irene Haley IIeli:n Hubble Gri:ichen K(WS Janet Lindsay 1921 JiLiA Jiw.E Hanks I Ielen ( ambell Harper CjI-.rtri ' di-; 1 Iarrison I Iarriei his KaTHERINE ' |R(.INIA Mabis Marion C atherine Mayers Alberita Napier Richards Angela Hope Sillivan Helen Marie Xieison LicY Wallrich RiBV Walton ( lara Williams Iacile Works Virginia Lovi;ll Mar . it-rite NlCl ' M 1 RIS SiMONSON LoiMSE Steensland F-rances Tl ' rni:y I Ielen M .arthy Mildri:d Rogi:rs Franci s Smiih 1 ;, III iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriMiiiiiiiiiiii I ' af 444 ::)iiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiilliliiiMllliiiiu niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiltiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ' - Gainnui Plii Beta iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiitiiiii. ' iiitiiiiiiiiiiMin:iiiii::!tiiitiiiiilllliiiiiiiilliiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiit Kappa Alpha Tlicta Fc ' undcd al DcPamv Univcrsils- IS70 I rim Members 7.0(1 ' Siel ' cckcr Skinner Brown Sackett Chase Bu rch B owne Parker Logan Stauflfcr VanderB.c Lcsh Groendvkc Browne Pratt SaRC Clark Bell Ashl-v Kinnar Winthell Todd Donkle Stromme Knowlton Hunhcs SanfofJ Gumming Pai X- PIcu- Rol-mb(jn Miller Moutz laylor SpraRuc Miss Lily B. Campbell Dorothy Bell Katharim; Brownl I Iflf.n Biell Helen Ci mminc Mae Groendyke Ann Hl ' ghes SaR; h Ashby ELirABEiii Bennett Helen Browne Doroihy Dennett Anita Donkle Charlotte Lesh Adelin Brihcs Mar(.aret Brown Llt.ili: CJIASE I jRoriiY Clark Daphne Conover I Iarriet Bartleit Saha Bitksmster F-RAN IS Dwii.Hr I Ieli n Gill Members in Faculty Miss RiAH Fagan NIiss Mary Bi ' eli. Members in rniicrsity Gladys I loi siriN Marjorie Kinnan l.uciLE Logan Edna Parker ' Alma R ibinson Mary Roldeblsh g o Catii rine Malrer Cora Mali: Marion Miller Adelaide Paine Florence Pardee ' iOLA Pleuss 1920 Marjorie Crothers X ' irginia Eaglesfielo Ruth Jorndt Gertrlde Knowlton Irene Parmley El EANOR Hughes I ll I I N iNt.l-RSOLL Marjorii; Lange Is Mil 1. LoWl Miss Helen Dodge Martha Sage Marion Sanford Mildred Spr, gle Norma Staiffer Iargaret Todd Miriam N ' ander Bie Helen Risdon Helen . -KiNNiiR Marj.arli Sperry RiTH Stromme Sarah T u hr Alice Tlrner MaRGI ERFITE PaTTERSON ' Eli:apeiii Pratt Frances Rldy Flora Sifbeckfr V ' iRA iN( hell Helen Sackett Vesia SroiT Marjorie Stro( k Leah Sik lifie f ' nuHiiiitiiitniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiir I ' att 44t ■ I Illlllllllllllllillll Itllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll IL- Kappa CAlpha leta Dlllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllillllllll Mlllll IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIII IIIIIIIIMIIIimillllllllliilllllllliliiiliiiiiiiiiiiH - Paf 44 ' iiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Pi Beta Phi  ., ..,wn Mhlu, IS 4 , „.,;.,., ■• ( •: In in:: Mcmlvrs. S li-: Kiml-all I lairirRt. n l uck. Mca m .nl llinJrn.k Hi nmr Sundill [ir. wn ALK l: ( R ANli Hiliia a I. nc, Mnoalin Camls Bliss Chrisiim Kina Brown Alma Christ isr; 1 Ianson Hawaii Tri isiiai i I Iarrini.io Oli i; MariIi Bi ARiisi I ■ Caimol Rai Bri:vi i Kaiiiirisi Ri rii Broi.an Mii.DRi n A Brivi I V CaIMI RISI lllOWK. BlR Fasmi l.ni ISI-; l)i NL(ii Al.A MIA I ll I.I NA I IaIIV Ei.i:Ai)i;iii Asm ( jiandi i :r Hti.tN Clayidn Mahj irii Brown Oonaidson •ll W,-- K;i .c Mavcr McGinn s Hcalc ■ r WI ' iliMiU Bn.Kan M Brcvkv C Bri li 1 l.„ ... ..J 11. sJ.J ' : ' --- Ks ms Sch Mi ' inhcis in Faculty RiiopA Owi N Pram 1 s Sabin Mcnibcis in I ' niwrsity ;?•!, iu ii - I ' IS Joanna Rosu I Iayi :s Martha Ianf. 1 li-ALtv Marjory Hkndricks Emily Amaniiius Kimhai.l 1 ilLDAl.ARDI-: H. MaYLR . I ' il ' i Marii-: Es(.h DoRoiiTY Paiikrson CjR.u:i Mar .ari-i Laimrop Mii.iiRKO ' ail Plcki-ti l )20 Rrill I k LLIN(.1R AriiMi Mai Porh r 1 )21 OoROIIIY M llol I ANUS Till IMA B Johnson l.l ' ( II i IL Kl SSI NIC H Wll III I MIN Barii II 1 Kri Alk i: Lloyd-Jonls Alicl Randall M( Clymont Dorothy Ellkn McGinnis Elinorr LoLisr fxiiiwri-rR Fran :[-:s ( arolyn Woon Maiu.aret Worth Rai.f RlTH Dl ' NI AN SlNOri L Katharinl Pai.i: Whiii-side I ll I IN Ramsly lisuii-R Jlliltte Wanner Marian Witti-.r 1 Ia:i I ErnRi I Wrkiit I ' r ni is a Ryan Mari.arfi R Siavri m Al I IHA . W Hill ' IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMt lllllllMIIIIIIIIMIIKIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllinillllllli Patf 14.1 illllllllllltllllllC IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIM ' :illllllllllltilii- niiiiituiiiiiiiiMriitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii: ' Vi n eta hi ■:- fl.- 3 5:— ; ' i= t-J mum ' — .- s f r%. -•- ' ' S Sw TiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniMiiiiiiiMHiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiMiiin Pair 449 ' MiiiiiiiMiiMiniiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiii Alpha Phi FoiinJvd at Syracuse L nnersily, IS72 Wisconsin. .• ! ( ' Xumber of Chaf Urs. Living Members, 2.9S4 Pain I kt l Smyl M. Bartholf Wil Sapp Jones J .ri.mrs Kunkcl Case la ilU W H.iirh.h IIk. .1 KC.onklin Schultc Kitchcll L Krcmcrs Bull Anderson V Oinklin W.lcoxon Mall Tormcy Lamb Mcgcath Noer Winchester lischwciler Iilchener Bcal M. Cxxjk Ingwcrson Cox Rohrs Carman Brown an Akcn Billau Kupfer CampKIl loin Spe. Dicke Portcrfield Place Stolle Miriam Cooki; Mary Brown Helen Bull LuciLE Campbell Dorothy Case Dorothy Dk.ki.rson WiNlIRED BaRIHOLF Laura Faville Gertrude King Harriet Kupi-er Marjorie Bartiioli- Beatrice Blal Marc.aret Billau Kathi-.rine (Iook )ULIA aN AkEN KIary Anderson Isahel Ba on I jRoinY (Barman KaIIII RINI CoNKLIN Mcnil ' crs in I ' nix irsit Cjratlttau- 1918 Clara IncwUrson Elsa Kremlrs Rl III NOER Cjladys Palmer Dorothy Rietbr(:ht Helen Rohrs 1919 Jeani- TTE Lamb Nell Place Alice Porterfield 1920 Isabel Flek her Dorcas I Iall Helen Jamison Virginia Kikhell I-AIRA Kremi RS 1921 JR(,INIA (xiNKMN I JORIS (!cK)PER Dl IRDRI Cox lil.AINI IIm HWT II ER 1« Margaret Tiichener Gladys Sapp Hannah Smylie Adah Spencer Ruth Stolte Marthena Whipple Janet Runkel Gertrude Russell Margaret S -HULTE Blanche Tolman ) ESSIE Meceath Marian Tormey Mariia Whipple Marii W in oxon llRNESIlNI- JeNISON Mabel Jones Mary Martineau ReBI (A NoER ( 1 K|l I W IN( 111 STI R HniilinillllllllllllllllllMIIIIMIIIIHinillliilllMIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIII: licr 4fO ' MiiiimiiiMiiin,„„„„„„„„„„„„ii, „„„„: (inn f ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' • ' ' ' •• ' ' ' • ' • ' • ' • ' ' ' • ' •• ' ••• .«.. ..n.n,M,„„„,„„ Miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin .IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIMIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIII. Delta Delta Delta Fi iinJcJ at lioslon L niversily. USSS W iscnsin Mil IS ' ly umhi-r .inn ' Members, 6,7 y Btunkow Smith Diikson Painc Murphy McCull Saunders I luRhcs il Churchili Liitiv J . KuJJ Wurntr [ivam A Milkr I. Miller I ' mhnit Piper Vose Hd Jen Ta l.jr Mcnihcr s in himilry Mrs W. J. Kiii-LKR Miss Marion HLViBLt Miss Florence Ai.i.en Miss Leslie Ross Mi ' irihcis ill I ' tiinrsity graduate Flora Buck I Ia:i,l :rM Bri nnen 1 IlI.EN ( jll R HILL lissiE Evans Mary I Iidson Mary Li i ilk ■Xldra Miller Leila Miller LoRNA Mlrphy noRoiiiY Paine iNt.EHORC Rion DoRoiiiY Scon Li ' HIE Warren iviAN Warner i UNA Adams ISIIRI i liuiii- Norma Cju. ' r .iiii.i Maiw.arei Ok k son 1919 Kaiiiirine FiniiE Ri ' iii Hri.HEs Marie Karlen ' |01 A MiLLICR Rl III PlI ' lR PoROIIIY Smiiii KaIIII RINI TxYI OR FrI PA I MHRI II LsiiiiR Brlnkow Mary ( Converse 1920 Rl III loHNSON I l :i iNIiCml I Iei in Pun ipi Mm ' i I Smiiii Ij IZAIIEIII l )oi ,i-: I II LI N 1 l i sir A(.Ni s tiRoioniioRsr MxRi.ARi I Kirch Mari Rl ndai I. I II I IN Snykir Mllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll. kllllillMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIinillllMllllllllllllllllllllll I ' atf ■ ' . ' Ulllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll. lilllllllMIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIinillllllllllllKIIKIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII ' - ' Delta ' Delta ' Delta tj ji ' a; . 1 1 ' Jii% y- Tiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiimiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiriiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiH I ' att 4f i IMHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Chi OmciTii lounJciJ al . rkai .sai. iSV Wijwmin, i(, W2 umhcr of Chapters. 36 wj :!i | T J nin Fillows I Icndricks KahknI-urtt Bute R Skaar Bccchtr M. Skaar 1 March Scvcrin dllms Niprud Kt-lcr Pttlibonc Stevenson Ball I )nalJ RiiJ Ollrill Sctllc (iricsscr Port; 1-uller SthraRc Wcstcilund l■l hc■r Hariix n Lcwi , HdviarJ. Suwart [Iraninc Gi£M; ifc: ii N.V.LI k Mc ' ttther.1 in Faculty C;. iiiiiR1m; ' C lkins Mcnihits in l ' ni ci sity I 5ROTIIY Blil cm R Kathrvn Boll Ha:rl Branint Rlih Ball MlLDRlCn liARTZ FLORP.Ncr. Colli vs MaRGUEKITE EmVARDS Gladys Fkllows Gelia Buf.ll Lois C-otiriiLL DliLMA DoNALlJ Ac.Niis Fuller Mar .i I RIII-: BiAi.ii GlAOYS Far(. ) JUNNlli S JIRU.L I9IS lAt;DALi:N Cronin Marion Fox MaRJORIIi Gr|ESSI£R Mildred Siewari 1919 Marjoril: Fisher OilROIIIY 1 Iarriso Ulsii R Kami ENHiRc. Mar(.1 ' 1 Riir: Kraitii Lillian Lewis Mildred Mai« ii 1920 Elii Hannevig Leila I Ii;ndri(;ks Beatrice Koeiin Mildred Porti Run I Seattle 1921 Maw L Heldt I Ili in Jillson Edna Kesler Dorothy Reid Martha Skaar EsiHER Xeprld |R MNIA PaSLEY Harriet Pettibone Gladys Severin Nellie Stevenson Racntiild Skaar Esther Van Wagoner Mildred Warner Rliby Westerli ' nd GlRIRini- KoWALKE (.JRAt E MiYERS wS ' •MIIIMIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIK! ' llllllllllltlllt- tlltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllT iiiiiiiiniuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii: Chi Omc0 a •D ' ..,-- -- -? ' ' immiiiiimiHiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiim iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinii iiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiI Patt 4ff iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilililMiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiii: lphu (J hi (Jinc ii I ' ciunJcJ al DcPotiir i niicrsily, G irniii.v i-, ISSy ■ HttI ■n MQ I Ki K I ' 3 r 5y X- :i lt L ' ' rW i H M 3 ' ?y Vn wH 1 ra T W r k VH f 1 ' 1 ,_ . - .- l 1 llarkcr Shoncsi Johnson Rich Nullcr Tyler ' ounR Ktcckhcfcr I la Crosby Rucll D.)nalJs.in lira J ford Crane .singer ns I iuJxm b ;hneiJer OirJell 1 McCarthy I ' ohulku Dunnclle ■indorfT Haidman SlininRcr Simpson inin Humiston Ziilmann Campbell (iiRiRi or Johnson Members in Faculty M Mtl.ARI 1 H ' DoL BLUR Members in I ' niiersity Croduan- Ir A Kaimarim. Run Hi:i.i;n Cathfrinf. Cromn Rf)SAMOND ( rosBY Mariannk Dl ' nnf;!!!-; l moiHY C:aihi;rinf. Findori f JtSSII. l.Ol ISF; CJRFFN JiAMiA Marif; Hardman IrMA AlKINS S RAil IiL)(;r;MA Cami hi;i.l Ri;th Ei.izabfih I nali son ' Myra Sl ' san I Iarkfr I.IONA All. TIN I Ik KMAN Anna jamf.scin 191 S Bfairkf Haydfn Humiston Kaiiiarini. I knsoN Mari.ari 1 Mary XU.Carthy Li oNA Annftif; Schneider Lois r-i,iLi,FR Shorifss Mary Esthf.r i ssingfr I IlLUA LOL ' ISE KlFCKHFFFR 1 Ifi.f:n ELiZABnii M Dolgall Arois Mo:iNi;o Pai ' lini; Shorifss Marian Eshifr 1 yi fr Rl III ZiLLMANN Ei.FANoR Am i.Hi:ii Gaik Mary Anamasia Iohnson l.ri II I Am I, INF Ni I II r IaIM V Rl Fill 1921 Loiisi: Sammons Marjorii IX ' ai Simpson tjFAIlYS Si ININl.l K l-RANi is MaR(.ARFI ' ' oi Ni; Anna Mai Bradford Rimi Marii I Iarinc I-1li:ai i HI Mil I.I R Cordfi.f A .ni s Larson Amia Iv (Irani lilvii.YN Iilizahi hi loiii fka tilNIA IIM aN til ni iniiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii intlllllllll: ' ■ liiiiHiummimmiiiiiiiiiimmiimin; C4Ipha Chi Ome a T IL niiiiiiMiimnniiMMM.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, „ ,„„„„„„„„„„„„„„„„„„„„„ ,„J illUillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllll Alpha Xi Delta Founded ill U ' inbaid Lollcnc . ' ' Vn,-. ' n«in ■ Xiimhr of ChapU-rs 24 Ward ' - Ompnian Ticrnty Schaffni Parslcv II Snmh R Smith ? Wirdcil lu.niT IK.rn Kjnim.t.r Miller C )t in Bunker Hancr M Ciiapman Gillis n- I- Martin White l it:Gerald VoiBt Bohan Fi.oRr:M;E Coi:rpi k M cm I ' ll s ill h ' tiiiilry 1 Ri N Potts WlNIIRlin SiMI ' SdN Mcnil ' cis ill I tiivct sity (iriiiliiati- Gi 1 Ns Miller Rl in ILLIIS DoROlMvil.ll LIAN BrINKIR Bl-ssik NIaiu.arli Bltxi. WlNNAIRLD KaTHERINE (a)R VIN GHRTRLDr FitzGeralo Rera (!ori)ei ia Haner Maiide C oai man Hartman AnA I loRN I Ieli;n Kammizrer Rl ' Tll Klhns Heli n Anne Martin Fniiii Marc.aret Martin l.ri LLA Frances oi(.t Emiu R inieri n W iriien Mary ' Zili ' Ha Bohan ida Alys ( oaI ' MAN Mar(.are:t Frasi r F ' i rkis JoslJ ' IIINE Mil IS GoRPl IIA Pll Rl I Helen Bii i i Smi mi Gi ARE- Gil I is Mannii: Parsi i;y GoNSri I.O BlRWELI OoRolin |(iM s Mary Ri hi Smiiii Sara Fay Sienens Virginia Simpson Ti ner Ka1I1I:RINE TlliRNI-Y FiiNA MaR(.are:i Ward Rl HY Gi AiRi White l )20 V ' lOLI T I IMLIN Ruth Tl ' rner I.Ol ' ISE S TIUErTE CiRi i( III N Loonier Mary Nh iiolson I ll NRII ' .I IA S HAIINI l illlllillllllMMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIiltllllltlllllllllllllllMllnilllllllllllli I ' att 4fg iiilllliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiniiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiv: CAlpha Xi ' Delta 7IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Illlltllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllt Illllllltlll Illlllll Illlllllllllllllll iiiiiiiititiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiihi Jiiiniiiiiiiiiiii Alpha Gamma Delta I ' ounJcd at Syracii.w. . cw York, I90S K.tk cll R. Shepherd I-:. Sammis lillr.iMm Edclman Unv .n Nl wii,.,! hoJJ ...ulI H. t)lcsen (iildwcll J.OIirscn Bauskc M. Shepherd Houlk l artung Riil-crls Kidd Nuhols Kamps lathaway LariRdon Chappel Clounh Oxjper Shurtleff Bray Starkv ealhcr O ' Brien MetDhcrs in Vniwisiry araitualv AbBV Bi ACH TlLLOTSON Rltii jANt: Balskf. Margaret L. Middlekalfi Marie Eilken O ' Brien Eleanore Bck.an Grace Catherine Bray Iris Vera Coldvvei.l Gloria Olive Cooper Rii Meda Chappel Mary E. Edelman Alice Files Leatha ' . Haril ' ng Grace Edith Haihaway 1 Ielen Celia I Ial ' k Eomi BiLLi (.si h Maui 1. Cook MaOI LEINE AvNIS Kll l Mary I.olim Niavmas I91S 1919 Mari.aret E. Roberis Maliue Agnes Shepherd Ida Farr Stark vp;ather Genevieve Eli:abetii Goi ' ch MvRioN Elizabeth Lamovt Irma Lancdon Martha Helena Olesen H AlBER I A ' SllEPHERn 1920 1921 Patience Kamps Erna L. Kiekhoi-er (jLaoys Kyte Laliretta Hessin Nichols Ei.i:anor Oleson l!)oROTiiY Hanco .k Shdrtleef JULIA Olesen Ruth R xk vi li. M R(.uERiiE Sammis El i:aiu- 111 Sammis Pi NN SlU LION •iiiiiiHiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiitiriiiiiiiiiitniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiintiiiiiiiiiiiiiMHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Patt 4t 0 iiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiillllliiliitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiatiiiiiiiiiiiiiiv: CAlpha Gamma Delta .-iiiiitiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiinMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiMiMiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiMinniiiiiiiiiiiH iltlllllllMlinillMIMIIIIIIIIIMMIIIIIIinilllllillllllllll. Achoth I ' oundcd at the University of Xchraxka, 1910 WM.vn.vin KIwlh. ' Wimher of Chat lers. U t.nin Members. 1,100 Cooky White Miller Luther KIcnk Tucker Thwaits Ctaig Kriiger Lamberscn Matlin Madiscn Maitin KriCBcr Snjdcr Schneider Taylor McClelland Elflein Sprine llalfuld Boyce Mciiihvrs in l ' iii crsiry FrANCIlS llLLMAN Florknce Eliaian Ruth Boyce HtLEN Craic. lONE KlF.NK Florence Kriecer Betsey Madisos Frances Martin Bernice Albright Lois Vivian Blackburn Ray Cooley Beulah Martha Connell Breta Luther Marion Grace Olbrich Mabel Thwaites Hazel Hateielo Winifred Lamberson Florence Lampert 1921 Marguerite I.oi ' ise Bartholomew Elinice P(x:AHoN rAS Doring Vivian Elflein Lauretta Hieb Grace Esther Hlches Myrna White Dorothy Martin Flora Snyder Verna Tucker Violet Kriecer RllTII McC ' .LEI LAN Emma Mielli r Marion Spring E A Taylor iiiitiiiiiiuiiiniiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiillliiiiiiiliiiiiiiiilliiiiilliiiiii llllllllllllllllllllllln: MIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIilllllllllllMIIIIIMIIIIIIMMIIIIIIMMMIIIMIMIIMtlllllllllHIiniMMIIIMIIMIIiniMIIIIIIMIIIlltlll ' CAchoth «► ( . ' ' . i i r ' A m nillllllllllllllllMillllllllllllMllllllllllllilllliiiilllilllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIi: 29 Paf 4f- iijiiiiiiniiiillliiiiiiililtilliliiiii.iiiiniinniiliiilliiilllllliilillllliltillillilliiiiniiiiliiilliiiliiiliiiiillliiiilliiiiiiiili ' -: Alphii Oiuicroii Pi hounded ot Barnard College, Id97 Wiwonsin. i:ui. ' ( ' Vu.n- ' , Thaj hrs. 21 Hoiii-I J,„ Babcock IVu-l I ' ulnam G.K«Jing La sen lolckiriHi (,r.cn,n. Pickctl Mclans lults Da ctt I- ' alk Members in I ' liiversity I9IS Hrleni; Jarvis Bowicrsox WiNIFRER InT.LIS Avis NlARri-; Pkikrs VIarcaret Nehrlich Pickett Mary Ei.i-abeth Pri ett Rlth Anna Tli is EdDINA PaII.INE DolMA Karen Fredrikka Falk Martha Irene F ' olckemer Genevieve Greenman Helen Katherine Jackson 9 g Margaret Johnson C arnet Kleven Margaret Melaas Clar v Nehrlich Helen Louise Tl rner ILIA Johnson •520 Dorothy Jane Bassett A(;nes Elizaheih Hoitll Gladys Mairine liEVERA .E Marion M(.( .aiie Mary C- Fowler 1 21 Lillian Hovland Oilin Lydia Joy La ey Rum Florence Fn .ehreisen Grace Mildred Putnam MARGi ' ERirE Gooding • illiMllllllllllinilllllilMllltlHIMIIIHIMIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIDIIIIIIIIIIIllllllMtllllllllllllllllllMUUin: Pott 464 ilMlllllllinilllllilllllllllllllllMlllltlllllllinMlllirillllMIIMIIIMIIIIIIIIIIUiltlllMIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIilllllllllllllllL: Alpha Oniiawi Pi lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll Pati 4e-f Sororities In the order of their estahlishmcr t at the University. Kappa Kappa Gamma 425 Park Street Delta Gamma 250 Langdon Street Gamma Phi Beta 428 Sterling Court Kappa Alpha Thcta .... 823 Irving Place Pi EJcta Phi 233 Langdon Street Alpha Phi 819 Irving Place Delta Delta Delta .... 28 East Gilman Street Chi Omega ol 5 North Henry Street Alpha C;hi Omega 140 Langdon Street Alpha Xi Delta 434 Sterling Court Alpha Gamma Delta . 418 Frances Street Achoth 1717 Kendall .Avenue Alpha Omicron Pi .... o2ti North Henry Street Pen and ink Sketches for the Soronly Sclionilraun hy MaJtlynSlitnchfietJ. ' IS. v luns .iiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiK illllllllMlllllllllllllllltlllllllllllllll ' J: The Union Board Officer. UiLKiiiNE E. Brossaro H. Parki;r Vi%f.k.s PuiLir F La Foixi-rn-: Donald W McGinnis President ice-Presidenl Secretary Treasurer I.VMAN BeEMAN El gene E. Brossard Deane G. Davis Elmer M. Doyle Lyel N. Jenkins Philip F. La Follette Donalo W. McGinnis Edward O Pringle H Parker Weeks niliiliiiiiiilllHMIIIIIn iilllirillllllllllllllllllllllllilllllMIIIIIIIIMIIinilllllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIl T JllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMllilMIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMtll): (.otnmcrcc (Aiib First Simester Max B. Belsky . C. Egbert J osEPHSON ELTON E. Johnson John Tr-altmann William J Babcock Max B. Belsky Frank ' . Birch John W. ESoehne Earle F. Drow Arthur A. Erdmann Arthur A. Fuhrmann Marvin C. Goul George A. Hill, Jr. Cecil L. Holman Welton E. Johnson G. Egbert Josephson Gordon D. Adams Herbert VI. Baker Henry J Gildermaster George G. Jones Walter E. Malzahn Frederick J. Mann Herbert J VIatzen ' : rence V Joerndt Officurs Second Semester President Erwin G. Sachse Vice-President .... Herbert J . Matzen Secretary I Ilrhert M. Baker Treasurer George A. Hill, Jr. Members 1918 Ray E. Karcher VIarvin S. King Donald W. McGinnis Edwin A. Moffatt Cyril W. Nave H. Vincent Nicoll Alex J . Olshefsky James M. Richardson Armin D. Schultz Ger ld D. Stone John Trautmann 1919 Lawrence E. Meyer Will G. Olin Erwin G. Sachse Russell R. Smiley LoYD M. Strope Frederick S. Stuhleb Walter J. Ward rno J. S itmidt Junes Kjlt(.hcr UrvW NkuM ijVUt OlllicllltU iCt J«n lti)in4t JocrnJt VIcGtnnu Adonu Nave Traulnunn Richordton Vlatzc Moffat S tofx Biich Schultz Sachse Baker Smilcv Johnion Eixlmann Caniner Cilman BcUky Elwcll KuethcnmciMcr I ulununn .VUl uhn Olin Mann OliOlefiky I iolman Duchnc Babcuck illllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllMIIIIIIIIHMllliilliiiiiiiiiiMlllHlllllllimillMIIIMIIIIIIIIIIUIIIMIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIilHIUlin • lllllttlltllllllllHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIItlllllllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMMnillllilMlllllli } ' ()iiii r Men ' s (Jjiisticm Association Board of Trustees Chili- Jrsni.i; ) B. Winslow, Chairman PRts C. R. Van- Hisk E. F. Rili;v Proi- M S. Slali.uter 1. (; Richmond Di;an I I L. Russp.ll J. M. Bovd Pii,)i. 1 crsiii Board of Directors A B 1 Iaix. Chairman W. E. Al.DF.RMAN J.L. GiLMN D H. OtIS E j. Frautschi S i GoonNK.m W. A. Scon J G. F ' lller W I I Kii KHoii R J W. Shlsier E. H. Gardnkr E. B. an N ' i.f.ck Cabirtet V ' lrne V. arnlv President Frederick E Wolf Cenerat Secretary Lc D W. Stroi ' F Big Brother Work Allan C. Davey Boys ' Work William Chandler. E Godirfv Church Attendance Alfred Giinderson Def utation Teams Kino G. V ' (xid karu ... Discusstonals Verne ' . Varnev Felloushif} Meeting Robert M Brewer Finance and isconsin in China Harold J. Pratt Freshmen and Secretary Baxter S.ayre Ceneia Conference J AS. D Petersen Office Secretary Arthur L ' pc.ren Publicity Wm Balderston • • ■ Religious Conference C. E. Snell Short Course Harold Noer Sick ' tsitalion Glenn Gardiner Social Ray Erlandson Sivial Service Ivan Lance Student olunteers C R. Grossf.r Sunday Efenmg Assemhly EucENE Haicil .M B(ii ' i s Temf erance VViRTll Fl Ri.l R W ar Correst , ' nd-nce ( 1 1 1 1 %%% i Fcritcr CJfny Suyrc I ' lmt Hrc«cr t,r..v%tr Mr Wull UalJcrM.ii IwnJkr Siicll l.ui.dcrv.n l ..rin,inn No Dnvcy Liinuc Sircpc Lrliindvm Vurncy Ciurdincri Wt idwurJ I purcn Pclcrvcn iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiliiiiiiiiiliiiliiiilllliliiiiiiiiiillilllllllllii: Paf 170 M|IIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIMIIinillllllllltllltll(MtllllllllllllMi IIIIIIMIIIIIIM IIUIItlMIMIIMI|i. ' Ki- ' (Jmstuin ' ' !V - -s Associiilion ccro ■7 V Executive Committee First Floor Arthur R. Upgren John Huston Second Floor John C. Miller Roland H. Frederick Exi ' cutiie Conintittee Third Floor Ch. rles L. Andrews iRTH F. Fercer Fourth Floor Pall Hlntzicker I IaroldJ. Pratt kiTjQiy ' House Officers Ovid B. Blix B. XTER A. Sayrl M. Athanasius Mi-v John C. Milli h Sixrilary Sheriff Fire Chief ' .IMIIIMIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIMIIIMIIIII illKrilllllllMIIIIIIIMIIIItlMIIIMl! .. , 47 1 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiinMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilllllllliiiiiilii. H Sociediul IHspaniiU dc la Iniversidad dc isconsin ■ II ni-.N I ■ fLMTH.-.i: !■ -n l..u;ul. l in I ' M. r. .t flu- puri - ' M- . l Jf il ipitm ini.r. ' -l in : hf r.ini ' -h nrt, langUaEe ,iJ litcrnturc. iind iit thi: same Lime olIcririK an opportunity tor practical application ol the academic work. l urmu the vei •inninu, • l i dancinu. it play ever Biven at the L ' l Officers Vtcc-PrcsuU-nt Committee of Programs Anna Heise. GraJ  Stngtng DrarnaiKJ Mal ' rine Vaughn. b Irving C. ScHWRjiKi:. 19 Music Bertha OcHSNtR. 19 Solo Dancing PosUrs •ZA RAG it: TA A comedy in two acts by Misucl Ramos Carrion and Vital Aza Lathrofy Hall. Wednesday. March 6th. 1918 l 5n Indalccio Jamics E. Grkunberg Carlos Archie J err bach Don Satuno Har(M..) R NotJt ZaraKueta Russell G. Smilev Pio John N Shurwood Pence UoDERT h.. RETTCtR Ambrosio Ired C. Kellogg Dona Dolores Helen McCli jtock Maruja . Lai REnA B Conklin Dona Blasa MiLtiRED C Bvans CJreftona MiLiMttD Spracl ' E Bli I WEIiN ACTS. Spanish Solo Dances hy Katherine V. Mabis. The Rom: of Spain ■ (Castanet dunce), Caprice (tamlx urinc dance) Director ProJucttan Manager Business Manager Proferty Man Posters Joaquin II S Lii (• „ A. Spracue Oi.r.A Segerberg. Maurine Nallun. Lleanor B Babcock, Helen ' Sa Ni-iniR, Newman L Dunne rhniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiMiiiiiiiiiiiiMitniiiiniiiiiiiiiituntiiiiiiniiiiiiifiiiiiiiniitiiiiiitiiiiitt Patt 471 iiiimiuiiiimiiiHmiimnmiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiniMiMuiiiiiiMim French Clubs Vtna i. de Monsieur Pcrtiihon ' U2mai. h r VtuJamc PcrncJK n Mcnnctta J cannc AuhcrRiMc chi.r Majori ArmunJ Dcsrochcs Daniel Savary ComiTiandant Ntalhic JoMTph . Comm issKMTa I rc Commissionu i re Kathi.hini: ' Maims [)|:KTHA (DcMSNIiR Ri ' TM Alice Burki-: Laihrop i rTi:( (•RANCIS ( Ei.i.is n Philip I-aI-hllltte Frediric Si ' KURY Don C I-aith Georc.k M Cari.ill I IsiEH ) lst.:i:ii Hai Leonard Erickson Lc ' .Mari Adnenne Roictte L ' Anglai!i La Declaration ' l.t 13 dxemhrf. 1117 Andre Fifine . . . Leofitjne Mmmc. Meillet Mme Graindrjr Graindor Dirtction — A. G. FiTE Kllis D I tter Katherine V Madis Frances E Smith Walter E. Mueller ' L ' Ecoles des Belles-Meres ' I .■ II Jn Direction — A. E Lyon Karl Mohlheld consuklo burwell Charlotte E Peadodt Louise Smit i Annie B. Gidlev Ray E LIoLCOMiiE -.iiilllllMIIIIIMIIli IMIIIIMMIIIlllliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii,,,,,,, Pat 4?} illhillllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIMMIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIMIIinillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli-. Vote - FOR . A Advcrtisiti r Club Officers CF.r.ll, L. 1 loi.MAN WlMIRKD iNf.LlS Edwin A. Moir-Ai i EaRI R F I ROW . Frank Birch . President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Director Honorary Mem hers in Faculty Proi-kssor W . G Bli;vi:r Proii-:ss(ir Edward H. Gardner ProI-I SSUK Oami I, SlARt.H Members Frank W Birch I li i.iNi; J. Bowi Rsox Earlk F. Drow F ri-.di.rick W. FL ' HRMANN Irkni; E. Hart Marjory E Hi:ndricks ClXIL L. HOLMAN WlMIRI.D In(.1.IS Edwin A. Moii att Cyril W. Nave Vincent H. Nicoll M. Elizabeth Pruett Sarah A. Spensley Frank T. Tucker liARTON K Warner 1919 John S Barileit Walter E KlALrAHN Joseph R Farrington Edward L. Perkins RoHERi T. 1 Ierz Harry H. 5h:ott W lELiAM ) McCov Frederick S. Stuhler 1920 F.siHi R E an Waconi r I uhtrnunn Spcmlcv Hnrlkit nn  a- Warner KUIiMl I Icndntk t.urJncr IVi ' Drow 1 liirl Niivc Pruclt ( llulmun IiikIi Stuhler I ' crkin lllllllllllllllllllltMlllllllltlllMlllllimilllllllllllllllllllllllirilllllllMIIMItllllllllllllllllllllMlllllllllllllllllllillllll I ' att 474 :i|||iiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiillilliiiiilliMi: iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiMiiHiiMitiiitiiiiiiiiMiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiKiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiii! ' . I Hiwrsity Press (Auh Officers Lincoln A. Qlarberg . . PrcsiJimt Marjorie Hendricks Vke-PresiJcnt Imcx:ene Bl ' Rch Secretary-Treasurer Owen Scott, Sarah SprNsirv, Arr.rsns FniRF.NBACH .... lixeculive Commitlec Professor W ' ii.lard G Bleyer Mi ' tiihers iti tiuiilty Bl IR C ' ONXERSE Professor Grant M. Hyde George Anundsen Marie Booden F. E. BiMP, Jr. Imoc ' .ene Blrc h LoiisE Cattoi John Chappel Bl-mr Converse John W. Cowan Dorothy D. Crook Ob .AR Dahlman I F. Davidson H C Dennis Mary DofiERTY Mrs. Harry Dunn . tcmhcrs in L ' niiersity AtiOLsiLis Fehrenuacii Catherine Goodhue Genevucve Hanson Marjorif. Hendricks Ethel Hess Frances Holmberg John Karel Louise Ludlum Leonard S. Lucoff Bernard Meyers Jane Von Pein Carl Peterson Irving A. Pl ' chner Lincoln A Qi xrbfrg Lucy E. Rogers Catherine Rosenberger Marguerite Schult: Harry H. Scott Owen Scott Lucille Selk Sarah Spensley Rl!TH Stromme Vesta Stott G. Earl Wallis Esther Von Wagner David Weiss CozYMiNE Wilson Margaret C. Wilson Sr«n lcv i thfcnKith . nunvlvcn t,Hiiirl- rn li OJiri S.« ' tl . ' •ci i Wilxin DaviOjun l-Jivn llnlilmiin Schult: LuJIun Wollc Crook Dtjhcny Von Pcin HcnJrKkx Rii(«r Cowan (llllllllllllll lllllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMllllllllllllllllllllltllMIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIt ' uiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiKiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiniiiiiiiiiiiii s2- X-CSMfi Amerkiiu Society of Mechanical Etijrincers Officers First Semester Second Semester Proi . A. E. Blrggren lion orary t ' hatrman PrDI- . . L GODDARD J. F. ROBF.RTS . . Cha rman G T. Moore R. MiLLKR .... -.ct -Chairman G. B. Warren K. G. Shiels Secretary W G. Mantonya A. F. BUCKHOLTZ . . Treasurer K. L. Seelback Members I9IX Edward .Xndkrson Ja.vies Peachey .■ rthlr Bl ' ckholtz Frank Roberts Larry Bl r:vnski Edward Sabe;rhacen .• rI1U R f-RI-nRICKSON Klrt Seelb.nck 1 IaRRY I llRSIllll;lMI;R Kenneih Shiels Alois Mikna Raymond Wirka George Moore 1919 DeWitt Yates WlLLARD BeLLAC-K William JvIantonya Carl Bemman Oren Marshall Carlvle Burgess Emmet Ml eller losEi ' M Dresen Bert Pl lrner Edwin Gallun • Rlssell Pl erner CxiiioRD Ives John S ti-t Bl ' RTON )ames Glenn Warren RnRHRr 1 riRic Edward illiams ? . . ill « fc Wlllmm K Cucrnrr l1ufKl ' KihI.Iu.Ii: (.iillun Uu zyn kl I ' li.l ltiillip l ' r..( (n JJutd M.-.tc K(.lx:il Viil,ii Yalo Wiirtcn H l ucincr MllI llull MunUm o P. .Shiels MiLmi . ' iiK tucllci IWIhick Sxllsflck lvc iiiiiMiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiriiiiiiMiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiin Pat ' ft ' iiimimiiimiiimiiimmmiiiii iiiiiiiiitiiiii! :tiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiu n ' f T v U. . Eii rinccrs ' (Juh First .Semester j. E. Newton W. S Wilder R A. Baxter P. V ' alr, ven Officers President .... Vice-President . Secretary and Treasurer Censor Robert A. Baxter Llovd L. Call Brooks L. Comley Howard H. Fuller Alexander C. Maercher Ernest B. Morse AlVIN C. BRAlrN J. Leroy Hasenpfxuc Presley D. Holmes Members I9IS 1919 Lawrence P. Works Arthur W. Gaubats Eugene D. Maurer Thomas W. .- yton Dwir.HT F. Benton Robert B. EJohmann Harold H. Brown Howard M. Coomber Ffn- t ' ' ; R hlwini rv 1920 1921 AVtt ' fiJ Semester H. N. Shaw P. Walraven A. C. Braun J. L. Hasenpflug Jay E. Newton Paul H. Schmidt Lawrence F. Seybold Harold N. Shaw Robert B. White Willard S. Wilder John J. Oberly Emil F. Stern Robert I. Svitavsky F. Stewart Turneaure Peter Walraven Peter Hanson Lawrence R. Jacobs Willard A. Kates Terrell B Maxfield Cecil P. Parsons I I.Av Ri. R p,,s: H. miinn (-.ricv I l.i-.tm(luK J.K..hs Storv: I ullcr l ar r,n, (j,nun Sulijicn Stern Call Scyhuld Shaw Tumcaurc Aytoo Wlkkr Banter ILimhIcn Mnurcr (.nuliit.- Lknlun W„,k-. Sviiin llanson While Schmidt MaifKlJ Katn IIIIIIIIIIiniMIIIHIIIMMMMIIHIHIIHimilM,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Pa,, 4-,- iiiiui ' i ' .iiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilliliiiiiittiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ' - C wrnicdl I ' n rinccrs ' Society First SemesUT Robert A. Baxtf.r Paul H. Sc;umidt Karl C. Kli-;imemi (.iiN Officers .Second Semester President Paul H. 5 chmidt Vice-President John B. VIertes Secretary and Treasurer Presley D. Holmes Members Gregor S. Apfleck Ariir ' r M Ani riws Robert A Baxter Alvin C. Braun Erwin C. Brenner Frank H. Cirves Caryl C C larke Robert M. Cretney William E Erickson E. David Famlberg Joseph A. Fleckenstein John A. Hanson Carl F. Hayoen Presley D. I Iolmes Karl C, Kleimenhagen Walter A. Koeiiler John B. Mfrtis Chester J. Miller Malcolm Mitchell Elton K, Morice John J. Oberly Earl V. Olson ViciOR A. Olson Roland A. Ra(.ai: Paul H. S ' .iimidt Milton J. Shoemaker Joseph A. Staidl Richard M. Siorer Howard E. Sweet Nelson B. Tan LoL ' is Van Ermen Arnold C. Vobach J. Wesley Williams Dufy F Wright ilu.-;. :il.„ca.-.,vl l..;,c. U,.„i.; K..fril. (.,ltUH, Ll. l..u=n Miller Kiwhlcr l-lcckcnMcin Swccl V. (llvm Slorcr Afllcck Schmidt llolmcs Williams V Olvm KIcimcnhimcn Dniitrr Von l-.rmcn Ton Vuhocli t iihllxTH Itiiiun lUrnnci Otscrlv Mnricc Clnrkc Mcna UlilllUHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIilllllllllllllllM ' IIIIIMIIIItllllllllllllllUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIillllllllMllilllllllllinillllllltlllll Patt '  , .MiiiimiiMmHim..,.ii.ininMiniMmi....i.!.,„n„miiM - Civil En rinccrs ' Society ILLIAM J C:a ILI.S Ray E Bf.hri:ns RoBHRI F. Lic;nT . Marry 1 1 FRE Nr.tci. t (arry Fre :f.l V ' lLLIAM J. CaMLIN Artml ' r Dahlman Harry H. Gumprkcht Ray E. Behrens Herman A. Blair Rudolph O. Buchhol: Members Graduate Robert D Short 9 A ' Walter S. Nathan 1919 PrcsUicnl Vice-President Secretary Critic Pal l E. Gillette I.ouis A. Kirch James McAteer Adolph V. Meiselwit: Robert F. Lk.ht 1920 CUMRE C CoNGDON Philip J Gr, nt Fabian John W. Hall J. Warren Johnson Frank Karcer C. Arm in Wiepking Donald E. Compton Fred E. Gerhardt Herbert Gl,vettli Frank K. Qlimby V iLi,iAM J Rheingans Eewis R. Sherburne SwK.Hr H. Srii.Es Helhert a. W elch Walter Jaeger 1921 Will lAM F- MOEIILMAN ■ RUII R I lie, MAN (•umprochc Khcinncni Mxhlmiin I,. 5 cThumr OnaJun I Liij i .ui,. u. ii ii . nu.rr ' .ri,. ' ! • MIMlllMllll illlUIIIIIIMIIIilllMIIIIIIIIMMliliiiillllllllllilMIIIIMlllillllMMIIIIlllllimilll Patt 479 ' t!iiitniiiitituiiiiiiiiitiiinMiniiiitniniini)}iuiiMiMiiiiiMMiiiiiini! IIIIIMIinillllMIIIIIIIMHIMIIIIL Iowa Club Offici-rs liUnts Honorary Members Mr ani Mks 1. L Josi-.s Members Nina Wickwirk Florence (-ollins William E Drii s Marcari-:t Fkrris Harold M Field SooTT Cross WAIT 1 (elen IIouskr Marion Hinn Marcarlt KiRai Rosa Marty Genevieve Greenma Hazel Hoac; Grace HLfTCHiNsoN Louise I.l ' im.i ' m Helena Ole5on Harriet Pettibosl C LADYS SeVERIN N EiviND Stabo 1 20 Marguerite Kl ' cheman Lucile Nittij John V. McF ii-j rin Helen Kamsay Hazel McCall Ronald Ramsay Lauretta Nichols Paiil W Romig Helen Mattius I AMES I { McKay Harold Morton i i2l Henrietta Schafi-ner Frank Soiramm Donald Smith Gladys Slininger Dean N. Stark Nellie Stevenson Rl ' TH Sl ' NDELL Maurine Vaughn Francis WaijvER Edna Ward Lcn ' isE Sammons Frances Tluney Ri.;by i-:sTERn. ' Nn Marion W itte Vesta Stott Marjorie Strock RiEss T. Stuhler Paul S Van A ken George H Watters I ' icid n.HJM:r F rri% Grccnmun Won Smith Nutter I nnldv.n Kiithtman IVips C Womcr ScaK, (jAUn Inalis Bn.un t tc- n Vun Aukcn Word Ludlurn Hurtnc IW- ack N Km n PcmN.nc Vhromm Slcvmv.n Komi« Mi.ttc- H-..cn Bell H Warner I .licrt C...ruin Wickwtrc MlirttlllJIIIMIIIHIIIIIMIIIIIMIIiniMIMMrilrMtlMllllltlllllllllllltMIIMIIIIIIMIIiniUIIIIMIinHIIIIUIMlllllHtl illlllllllllinii: ' IIIIIMIIIHIIMIlll ' lltllllinillllllllllU Wisconsin Mciiornh Society Officers If 17 IS Milton Muses ... President Florence J. Ellaian Vice-President .Augusta Felsher Secretary James E. Greenberc Treasurer Ben L. Ell. ian ... Chairman Fixectilive Committee Honorary M cm hers .Mrs. Julius Rosenwald, Chicago Miss Henrietta S:old. New York Associate Members Prof. O. J. Campbell Prof. William Ellery Leonard Mrs. Jos. Jastrow Prof. R. E. N. Dodge Dr. H. M. Kallen Dr. B. H. Schlomovitt Prof. Arnold Dresden Dr. H. M. Kay Mrs. S. A; W ' oldenberc Prof. L. B. Wolfenson Active Members Ben L. Ell_man Florence J. Ellvian .Augusta R. Felshf.r Hymen S. Lipschutz Milton Moses Irving .Muskat .Sarah Sinaiko isadore dinerstein Morris Finsky James Greenberc Leonard Bercstein Elsie Cluck Harry Hankin I Ierman Huber IsADORE Block Hymen Davids in Ja!s et Epstein Ida Gold .Mark Cioi ntii m. . Swii II I |..MrM I . Jacob Fr- nk Jack Frank 1919 Ethel Levitan Maurice Ross Sohnia Sinaiko 1920 George Lew- Sam Lepkovsky Baron Meyer 1921 Louis Fr Vnklin Harry Halperin Clarence Jung MONT.AGUE I.FJiSLER I Iers :h LorwiN K ICHARD LoEWENTHAL MUKL MaCHLIS C2lARA MoNFRIi n Israel Rotifr Emil Stern Ben Wishnefsky Anne Yabroff Bertha Yabroff V ' iLLiAM Stern Joseph Sherr Myron Schwartz Jacob Weinberg Harry Raden J. Donald Roihchilo Oscar Rozoft A. Shapiro Morris Shapiro Aaron Scheinfeld David Schneider Herman Sinaiko Jacob Weisman TiiiiiiiiiliiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir: TO Hat ' l oiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiitriiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin:: Vl ' 4 The Chinese Students ' Club FtrsI Semeslcr Nelson B. Tan . V Paul LrANc; . Kkats S. Cuv M. H. C:iiou . . Officers President . Vice-President Secretary . Treasurer Second Semester V. Paul Liang Keats S. Chu T K Ho C. T. Chiang C I ' . (Chiang M. H. Chou Kea IS S. Chu T. K. Ho Members Joseph Wong O. I I. Lee V. Pal ' l Liang Nelson B, Tan C. J . Waunc I I-. I 1l w Itllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllllllltll Pat, I- ' niiiillllllllllllllllllMllltlllllllin jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiu The C( n i:rc ati( iial Students ' Association ' ((I- CNBIXF ' r Van N ' atla C Warner Klann Walravcn hlolmcs IDokc Himmlcr Bird Mann l-lalik Hickey Bryhan Thionc Hopkin Ciflford Buckingham Pottc Pidi Lcavict Bucll Luihcr Sarlo Snyder Stauflcr Rou« CaM Enger Ashby Simcxuon Wanner Martin Simpson Ri)gcr Keller E. Wilson 1 I II 1 ■.l I Hsi I ' , Cl N4,Kl.l.AIIONAL PAKtSX lKH.lSt TfllllillllllllllllllllllltllllllllllllMlllllllllllllllllllltllllllllllllllllllHIIIIMIIIIMIiniMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIMIIIIIItlltllllMIIIIIIMlin illllllMIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIln lllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllilllllllllllllilllllllllC Lutheran Student (labinet Executi Rii ' . Howard li. J nyher Eli:abeih Kundert ... OttoJuni; .• aron ). Helkre( 111 . . Urnvcrsity Paalor Prt ' sideni of Cahinel Secretary-Treasurer President oj l.ulher League i % III ffl I ,l jg gj ' jj , ftlfj i ' lii -uthcr l-ciifjuc -iinJiiv .Schcx.l ... ■.) . M. 7:00 P M. IVv .-nfih NcpruJ I ' I ..V WiMtl.ir IklffrclM I In lrlul■ I litlMcnscn Siii riiiii Alhtrilil llliiu Himin K 1 ..v ,h1.-cI n IliiliiiiinJ I linn S lluiitl.- Murphy Cijiulcrl K v ll..wiirJSnvJrt M..limnn ImviuI lunii ' Mill iiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiitiiMiiiMiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir: iiiiiiHiiiniiiiitiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiMiitiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiMiiiMiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiii: The Methodist Students Tut Rkv tnwARu W Hi CarlQ Harris. 18 Helen I Fish Group Chairmen IJniversity Pasicr Student Secretary (Office Secretary Mrs. K B Balc Iris Coi.dwell Lalua Harkhr Prof M O Wi Cl.lHKORD IVI.S Alfred Koehi i C E Lee Amelia Yeacer Mr-s B E Miller Maude Miller Nichols Maiu-i Smith Wesley Traver Miles Warner Joseph Travers. Chairmai Orpha Coe. Chairnuin Bes IE Gunn. Chatrrruin Grover Greensladc-;. C uii LiARL J . Cooper. C iairman Classes and Organizations liihU School Super trtlenJent ' ira Winchell. St ' r tar Freshmen — iZhnsi and Vltxlcrn Chnsiianity rman fc,l .NA Gapicn. Secretary Sophomore— Paul and Early Chnsiianity Mauel Smith, Secretary unior— ' Survey of Books of the Bihlc ' m Walter Koehler. Secretary Senior — literary Appreciation of the Bible Carol Bird, Secretary Rural Church Kern E Constance. Secretary Epuorth League Betsey M Arthur Tiecen. Treasurer Rev E W Blakeman. Teacher Prof C E Lee. Teacher Dr Gottlod Cast. Teacher Atty Frank W. Hall, Teacher Rev a 2 Mann. Teacher Mason Campbell. President Lois Davis. 1st Vice- President Helen Coluy. 2rui Vtce-PrestderU Calvin Wolfe. Srd Vice-Prestdent Laura Harker Marcl fjiite Jenison L HISE KtLLtXX. Betsey Madison B E Miller Daisy Milwaro Maude Millfji p ssy modfjsitt SON. 4th Vtce-Prestdent Edward Perkins, Secretary Orpha Coe. Membership Secretary Clifford Ives, Treasurer Lucille Campbell. Pianist Maude Miller. Secretary J G Moore A J Myrlano M S Ni. E L Si. ( tfii : 1121 i;nir ' rr A ' W 2 IS9 TiiiinMHiintiMniMiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiinininiiiiiiinHniiiniininiiitinniiiiiiitiiiiintiitiMiiMtiiiiniMii ' itiiitniir Miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiniMiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiitiu Das Dcutschcs Hans Officers Gracr Foglesang Madf.i.f.ine Gl ' ILLEMIN . DoROTHRA SkX K President Treasurer Secretary .•1 riiv Mctiihcrs Flora Buck Gertrude Dunham Anna Essincer Grace Foclesang Laura Fuehring l )oROTHY Gardner Madeleine Gu ' illemin Lillie Hathaway Florence Jacobi (xara Jankel Mary Johnstone Adelaide Porter Gladys Ricgs Ena Rohner Irene Scrutchfield Charlis Strong E 3rothea Stock Am 1 a W ' i iSKiRc h Olio Balmann ( j.AiR Bartholomew Associate M, in hers Alexander Saxfr l-uriiER Fleuger 1 Iarry Raden • tiiiiiiiiiliiilllllliiiiiiilMlllllllllllllllliiiiiniMiiiilliii uuiillllllllllllllllllllllllliiiiiiiniiiiir Pair 4 il IIIIKIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIItllllllMllllllllllllllllllillllllllMlllllllltlllllMlllllllllllllllllllllllilMIUIIIillMIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIillllllllC T ic? A r Association T ic Agriculturiil AvM xiutiun. founded in the spring of 1 17, is an orfianization of all Badger Agrics. Its purptisc is the unification of the Ag School and the support of its activities. Officers DlL, NE G. Da is ■ . . President Miriam C. O Neil Vice-Presiderxl Edith Fllt; Secretary Searcent p. Wild Treasurer Rcprescntutives-ut-I.tirili ' Adelaide Paine Ralph Nafticeb iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiir: Pat ' ' - ' luiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiMiHiiiiiiiiiiiiMitiiiiiiiii; (icrrruini.stischc (MCScUsclmft Officers B. Q. MoRCAN PrciUlcnt DoRon IV Gardner . . ' kc-President L. A. Pfi.ieger Secretary )oiinL Kind Treasurer Hxeculive Commillee Chairmen of StanJin Corrm iltees W. J. KtLLKR Literary Committee Slsas ' SitRLiNC Social Committee A. W. Aron Music Committee E. C. L. RoKDDtR Scientific Committee I9IS 1919 Madei.kim-: Gl iLLEMiN Alma Gross DoRornv liizM- Milton Hakf.r Armano S ;iiii.li.r Erwin Mohmil Proiirani of the ) ' ear Oct II Oct. 23 No -. Nov. 19 IXc 4— Dec. IS March 12 March 2( April I) April 23 May 7- Muy 21- -Illustrated Lccluic. I )k RhcinucKcnJ, ' Prof. Hohlfeld -Musical Program -Theodor Storm Fcier. Lecture. Prof. Bruns. Readings, Prof. Morgan and Miss Braunfeld -Illustrated Lecture: Die deutsche Stadt im Mittelalter, Prof. 1 laertel Two one-act plays: Der Kraemerskorh. Hans Sachs. IXr W ' eiberfeind, Bcncdix —Christmas Program -Student Meeting. Three act play, .Meisierschalt. Mark Twain -lllusi rated Lecture: Arnold lioecklin. Professor Bruns -Musical Program — S)cial livening -lllusirated Lecture W ilhelm IcII. Prof RiK-dJer — Dramiiic livening UIIIIIIUMIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIU I ' atr 4 III P • G Dcadiication W ll£REAS. this section is greatly indebted to its unwitting and unwilling con- 1 nhutors who ha e so kindly made ihtmseKcs conspicuous objects for satire, and Will Id AS without them this section would read like a Sunday sch(X)l quarterly, therefore be it RcsolveJ. that to Flip Adler. I N E , the Chi Phis and their noose (they rope in pledges with it) — paper, the Alpha Gams, Vcrnc V ' arney. the Sigma News, the Thetas. the potatoes (get the alliteration ' ' ), the Gammy Flies, the D.G ' s and their famous bath-tub and black-list, the Kappas and their slippery front porch, the Sigh Yousc and their (ire. S G A and its rules and rulers. Ray Er- landson and Leroy Burlingame. the close-up fiends, sorority alley, the Lit and Das LX ' Utsche Haus. and our censors we. with all due respect, do hereby flippantly dcaducate this tank of Poison Gas. so help us ( arl Russell Fish riu- n c; Hiitiiiui T« 1 iiiitiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiinMiitniiiiiiiiiu y ¥ x ' R WORK. CJcntIc reader, put on your giis musk. You ' ll need it iis wc conduct you ill iroujih the Kick yards and among the garbage cans of Llnivcrslty life Sherman was vL ' .;ht. War IS Hell, and so is Poison Gas You ' ll think so before you ' ve gone much I irther, and we ' ve alre;idy caught it for what we ' ve done As Kipling didn ' t say: Oh. the friends we lost, and the cash it cost For the excellent things w c planned This Poison Gas of ours is a strange concoc- tion, g e n t K reader, contain ing, as it doe-- many odors, in eluding tho-- . from malt and vinous liquor rotten eggs from the class rush. the smell of powder (both kinds), and the famous something rotten in Denmark, but on one thing we pride ourselves, and that is that there is absolutely no odor of sanctity about it anywhere. If wc have missed anybody of any consequence in the I niversity, we are sorry. We tried to pick out and pick on the biggest boobs in schixil, and for King we nominate Flip , dler. because of his intellectualism He wins the Ingersoll We mav have given some such as the . lpha Gams, more free advertising than their prominence warrants, but we should worry, we re asphy.xi- ated already, and we don ' t care what happens at our funeral. Wc have worked hard, and even though wc have given you poison. We hopes you likes your drink. 5vays Gunga Din r Hate ViorkrJ Hard Ahw ix th ijtArtiifit Cun n w l IROL GH the courtesy of and by irrangement with the SkyrcKket column we herewith present the winner of Nick ' s ankle eonte--t. which created so much interest in the C!o! Nick kept the name of the winner a secret, but K-fore he  enl to war he brought us the accompanying pic- ture, so that the loser might know what they had to compete with Several sororities uic already making plans lo hiive strong contestants in the contest next year Ihe Kappa •• so Dame Rumor sjiys. have added n ques- tion concerning ankles to their applica- tion card nllllMKIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIItllllltlltlMIHIHIIHIIIIimimillllll IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIiniMlllllllltlllllllllllMIHItlllllllllR iiutuiiiiniMMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiu ■ .v iiiillllMlilliiiltiltllllHIIIIMIIIi!: iiilllllitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilllllllllllinillllllllllMlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillMlllillllir: lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllt ' illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllliilliiiiu THE SIGMA NEWS Written by the N ' Miu .«UIc-. .iiiJ Piibli-lieU .i {Courtesy aj 61 S llic hi ' nuj .i l..i v.n rtcr a Hard Wind A ' . H«nry) ,6 - ' ' A . ' u.. ' ■ - -- V M «f rf« ' - ' -::; if - ' . ..: f ..- . -., ' . ' T l-T niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiHmiimmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii M IIIMIIIIItllllHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIItlllllllllMlinilinillllllllMllllllllltlllllllltlllllllllllllMllllllllllllllllllllli It Is iiiiiiiy About Ambitions! It always is the maiden uilh at ftcahng eyes And the gentle little confidential air W ho wants to be a cave it-oman and haie her man Lead her to the altar by the hair And It always is the woman with the mission style chin And the hiiild of a suffragette hose only aim is to go through life As someone s droofying violet Invariably the woman with the fog horn ivice. And the face like a subway sight ( ants to sing the leading part in the home talent show In the blaze of the cold foot-light. But leave it to the woman with the Amazon frame, V ho has to pay two pennies when she chances To ascertain her weight at the weighing machine. To ride on her partner uhen she dances And the Winuniti Arcti ' t the Only Ones Either! Tor llu-rc .•• olJ Johan. the laiutly pat. WVtom all this year we saw Training twelve long hours a day To be a Theta-in-law . ' nd little Dave V eiss. the whole day long Goes browsing about the Journalist ' s shop: He wants to be the organ o) the Socialists. I led have to be an organ uith a tremelo stop. a VI: HIlMMIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIMIIIIIIIIItlllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII..,.. llllllllllltlllllllilllllin Pan 414 iiuiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiihX ' •■ • ■■■iMiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiii: The Ayes Have It Butk in the ihemlud I ' ui nii. The fellow who got conneJ Told the folks that he had sore eyes And the goi. i old wind shields donned. But now he takes his seven flunks. And after a farev ' ell Jag, hie turns in his co-op number For his ma a senice lag. , ' nd hack on the lonesome camf us, WTifrf the co-ed sadly sighs. The only relic of the past .■ re a pair of Hoover-eyes. And doivn in the dank library W7i ?rf crawl and starve the flies. A grim and faithful Phi Bete Looks with pensive, sad buck-eyes. V7n7f now and then from the clinic A feeble freshman hies ith a C on his medical record Because of his Central-eyes. . ' nd then there comes a ray of hope That makes our sad hearts rise WV see a gleam of gladness — JLST EYES •OUR DEAREST PONY ulhoti:rJ anJ Pa, J for Stia I ' l,. Mi ' ha ;J | and ' W Ji TllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllllllHIIIIIIIIIIIIHMIIIIIIIIIIillMIIIIIMillltlllllllllMIln Pag, 49 f uillllllllllllllllllllllMlllllllllllllllinilllllMlllli iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiL: iiiiiiitiiininiiinMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiMtiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir; Patf  jiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii! ' ' iitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiinniiiiiiiiiiiiHii: IT ic Wisconsin i ' terarj (ac az nc MadiMn. May. 1916 Edilorwb An uttwvr lb our v-riiin ' , Philty Pa lilItT 3i thj the Lit ihoukl pnat tbe flss on iu (uvn- Emw Mrtr ij Forty Bockcu of Blood, or The Widaw Rr vncr . Gufaa(« Cam, • poem Huhhnuro Tofn ii Tbc Parple Cow. ianlmy Robin Howl 4 TIm piVilMlDcy rf wU ' Advalittmmt ... - . . by Lincoln A Qiurfornc Ctar ikbt to Re n Johum ' Smcrtniku 44 Wbr (Kit on inc Cari RumH Fah 1 Eaotmc Intrtlcctiulmn. it nwsnini and ibi cxpon rtti P A. tPnnrr Albm) .v TV book Uvxi H « «CT the L ' n T D. U. B. Brtw ■wTt thr Brtttut NUT ihe SocinlUla. ihc w? advtx«lr i th. love, thr bohcmiai U has bc«n the aim and Uterary Magazine lo prove hoping, that the iLnginecn. tl and the lawyer do not. after cause we heard and heeded thi starving in an intellectual ' Vl a hUta. and the I. W W ' , democracy, the democracy of fi ind a lei artiBcial tale of KKie I and Mexico, even today and endeavor of the W a «.t rld grown tired of Ag«. Ihe Commerce men. count (01 much, and be- rarnmg cry of a humanity nd took upon ONE dor not rtrcd Literary Magaxin«  ti lie can poaaibly be u gUnce at the matthead « crmirtg that all the brair anything that  not Rum alue that ulfide of ing tr (o how the UatI dii- Lni etuty if. indeed. I that  not Ruuian can be u d to have brainsi crntratcd in the cian.un-. of the Lit alaff Our ■ ill prcbabfy «ay ihat we are rrrtcfiird lo claim t ihry are wicrg en fcoth tcortm In the firtt r don ' t claim it. we admit tl. as we Mid once if «r are chatgtd with tnlellrctualiafn. Mr are provd to plead guitiy - artd in th« second place, if wr didn t lay to. who Mould Thrae neo-patrioti who conceive of paItK ti«m «• being a •miimcni of loyalty lo onr ' a country onl thow iKal they are incapable of that greater % orld- i(rn hip which has long dixinguubrd ' and may even po «ibly tome day eatiriiunh ' ihoac couf g oca aicatlct cf ihc rKw ihoughl. ounelvca the labor of love of rxpreuing and mterpr for the benefit of thfumasscn the beat and mml profound in art. drama. portr and free ver e. we are br«et by a howling pack of ignoramuv- whose highest ihoughl i lo publish a daily paper and who alfrcl to believe that a •onorous essay, even though it does nuke ju l as much •enae it read backwards, i less important ihan defending the University ' s good name against the yellow press. What would these carping crilics have known about Doaloyevsky and Turgenev and Snee itofI, had we not told lhem What do they know now that wr have lold lhem Think of the cultural influence of being permitted to read articles, critiques, and the like, by us. who can speak w casually of Plato and Kant and Tol.toi. and who can sting the qua and vide arwi nco ' s with just the same degree of nonchala nce as Chili Al exhibit, while he slings the hash Imagine, if you can. the gratitude of the neo- phytes of learning who first heard of Imagery through our gracious effort Think what long sistas of delight ai d contemplation ha%-e been operu to llw undergrad- uates of Wisconsin through the gateway of oui propa- ganda for Russian literature. What Hill man has not been helped lo a clearer ur dersianding of Aristotle. Quin- tilian, Julius Caesar Scaliger. De Maupassant, Tennyson Beethoven. Voung. Lord Castlerragh. Joshua Sylvester. Dr Donne. Abraham Cowley. John Dryden. Goethe. OKar Wilde. Milton. Collins. Shelley. Southey. U ' all Whitman. Amo Hoi . Spenier. Lmerson. ¥uim OutKe. and a sec Mlilh 1 r of others rse few re ihink - ha ' proved ihal [KOftle evidenll Hlllllllllllllllllll IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIMIIIIIIMMIIIIIIIMIMMIIIM Illllllllllllllimilllllllllllll.- Pal ' ' 7 :iiuiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiii(iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Satire (As our censors would like to have it.) 1H1M;s Wll WOl ' LD LIKE TO SEE 1. A Kapp;i without a lur co;it 3. AD. G. without a bathtub. .■ Ciamma Phi without a muffli- 4 A satire section without a censor. Phi licte with brains. Hi:: ' What time is it ' ' She (just pledged): Theta clock. When is a (ish not a fish ' ' When its Carl Russell! Shk (at mixer): 1 live at Barnard Hall. He (a frosh): i law ' Haw ' Sounds just like Barnyard Hal He: Mendota yawns. She : Why don ' t it go to sleep ' ' It ' s in its bed ' Kappas l- ' cr 0 ats rcc t Ice I hinRs you could do without, ti Hixiver and Garfield: 1. Fussing 5. C ndy. 2. . )alted Milks. d. Ice cream. 3. Knitting 7 ( ' igarettes. 4. Dancing H Beer MA4 WL ' FF ' Mary had a little lamb . s doubtless you ha e heard. She didn ' t like it so she swapped It for a dtxJo bird. She : When is an eight o ' clock not an eight o ' clock He: When you ' re late Seie: No. On Sunday morning. When is a prof not a prof? When he ' s a fish (Fish). Siiid the man to the mouv:: I ' m going to catch you ' Siiid the mouse to the man: Aw, close your trap llll (;S WI-: 1 ) I LIKE K) SF.F. 1 A con ' on a quiz pxiper. 3 The Lit 2 A summons from the IX-an. 4 Our name in skyrockets S. Our girl when we re with a tel-op. , in t ihem .Mpha (iiims awful exclusive, though ' ' Am t ihein Kappas |ust the opposite ' •RdSII IRMil I (UN ' S I i . PrcsMnR the l ullon iiiiiiiiHuiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir; Illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllii: iillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll t el rcxntatuc - Woin I 1 c t-M I. Ji n 1 u I u t wui nil FiE FLitrs PG-5 ovin« HiFi niPMft Fitrvi cm o ' i Che - ' olDular — Trom rollic:) l l here tvrrTj O ond eve itoqit Vvcllqirls yCHJve get some Miff B«tQi and Ch, Pvi ore al well rtpremrttd X lonit bthr Kl«- m«tj C) li-K«r No7 ot the ZiF ? „ Bud i+«wart retires - owino to a V ' ' ' )f ' Chc Burnuiid HqII Dclciiulicn—  A Y -s- riiillliMiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiMiiiHiiiiiiiiiillillliiiiiiilllilliiiiiiiiiiilllliiiiiiiiiirilllllllllllllillllllilllllllllllllilllllllilllllliiiiiiiiiiir iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii: .IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIU lU 1 L 1-: T I l i I II SII.IA ' CiOMLRNMIiM ASSASSINATION oi- THE L ;NI I£RSITY OF WISCONSIN Hl« Artical Wdn. Co);nomen I ' hi.- niimi.- (if ihlv dlsorf-iiniciition ouKht to Ix- the Silly Gi Women Cd-cd Stcwdtius ol the L niversalitv of Wisconsin L-rnment A ssiissi nation of the Female Arik.al Tni) ()hji tion. ' : I he ohiections to this parody on an orKanization will certainly K- that it tries to rcRulute the diiily Irfe and hahiis of prayer ol women who have mothers at home who allow them to stay out us laic at niKht as they please, that it is to be used for political pur( ises hv the handful of women who mislsimana({e it, that it tries to increase their sense of res| insihilit towards one another when they have no sense to bcKin with and that it tries to Ix- a medium hy which the s )cial stand- ards of the I niversiiy can be made and kept hinh—oul of sijiht, in fact Akik Al- Timiii. All women of the I ni ersa|ity shall, should, or ouj hl to K- ipsti facto, in loio. e plurihus onion, delirium tremens members of the Assjissination Ciraduate siewds uill not K- asked to pjiy .S (. ' , . dues because ii is realized that there is no use tryinK to f ' x ' l them any longer .llillli- ' niiillllUlllllllllltllllllUIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIiillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllintllllR I ' a,. fOO uiiiiiiniiiiiiMiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiMiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiniiiiniiMiiiiiir iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii: ARiirAL For. Ossi i-rs. The a isifcrs of this iifTiliation shall consist ul Rmh Siciju.- others urc inimiitLTJal. president, iirid -und-and the HI Y-l.. S. 1. All f;irls ol the I nuersity are requested to leave all parties in a s 5bcr condition in time to make their ei ht ocl(x;ks the next momins. if possible. 2. No ijirls in the I niversity shall attend any mid-week Middleton p irties unless thev ha e the sanction of the L ' niversity authorities and the assurance from them that the place is all rifjht 3. An annual, weekly tax i woman in the L ' nivcrsitv. if four bits shall be le led upon every at home, or anywhere else that s iy, all women livinR in rooming If you have false hair ' 4 All women students not liv is considered respectable, that i houses, in any of the sorority houses, or in Barnyard hall or Dad hum hall, shall be required to observe closely the model house rules ol the Silly Government . ssiissination for the purpose of finding out whether or not there is any hope for the author of said rules. I his tine point has ne er yet K ' cn settled to the satisfaction of some of the women. HOLSE RL LES. The members of your house, including the cat and the clock, arc requested to adopt and bring up the following rules, which have ;rcat strength in Barnyard and Dadbu.rn halls: Quiet hours are to be observed whenever you feel like cutting loose a bit. Men may be received from eight to twelve on any evening on which you do not happen to have a date. [icdroom slippers and wristlets must be worn after ten o ' clock. Liniment must be rubbed on the chest ever - time somebody in the house toughs in order to keep the lungs in good condition to ward off an attack of the con. Swimming practice in the bathrccms must cease at eleven p. x. Bathing after eleven is only an affectation, anyway Curtains must always be pulled down prcvicus to sitting down before your dresser to doll up. bccau e state «ecrets rr.ust be kept at all costs. If vou have false hair, or teeth, you needn ' t tell the world Never consent to ride with a man after nine o ' clock in the evening (or morning, either, for that matter) unless he has at least a Packard to do the honors with. It would be cheapening yourself to jolt along the drive on a beautiful moonlit evening in a Ford. (This rule is rather hard on eme ) No picnic parties for two will be tolerated. I n ' t be stingy, Rules to be decided by each individual house 1 Bathrooms. .At some houses, the girls prefer to cover up the dirt with powder and paint, therebv siiving on soap and water So it is left up to the individuals whether or not biUhrooms arc to be derruinded i f the I indlidv 81 No drivlna •her ■ 00 unlc«« he h« a I ' ockard ' TiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMMiMiiHiiiiiiiiin Paf SOI iilil ' illlllllMIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIinilllMIIIIMIIIIMIIII llllllliMMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIi: ,m mm f Bzi ff fi fS%. ■ 1 hi- Law Shop Closed MV «  hr,.- .c . ■ . . , , - ■ . a - Invaded by Co-eds THE MILLENIUM C HAI much hcTHldcd state of affairs, t ■ yj and Oirl Russdl Fish shall abjure lou -- ' mur outside of the skvrfx;kel column the millenium. when the existinf; order shall be upset ' ;)ud ties, arrived last winter, and scarcely caused a mur- ilumn We were just getting used to the liolsheviki when the said millenium arrived to make it.s home here, and so it is not to be wondered at that it was hardly noticed Much had been said about what events would mark the ad ent of the afore- mentioned millenium. such as that everyb xJy would love his neighbor instead of his neighbor ' s girl, and that we would be able to pick our living off the trees again, instead of out of someone ' s else pockets, but we. being an engineer, knew better, and laughed up our sleeves at the smug prophets who thought that the morning the millenium started they would be waked up by a winsome angel who came to bring them their breakfast in bed . ' h. no! Vc knew far better, . ccording to a tradition handed down to us from St Patrick, we were to recognize the fateful day by the fact that the Law Shop would be closed and the Engi- neering building would be invaded by co-eds. who would take possession without molestation by the dazed Engineers. Ah ' Signs of intelligence begin to make your face unrecognizable It dawns upon you that we are right .Astounding. ' you say. Marvellous ' You are right, but not so fast. Rome was not built in a day. nor overnight, either .Ml is not o er. yet One thing is lacking to make the thing complete, and that thing is the enrollment of McNutts McElroy, R. L Jones. C N ' rooman Prof I lobbs and S I I .Adams in the institution across the lake They have done nobly, and the state should keep them there as a reward for their efforts We are patiently waiting for that to happen, so we can die happy Abi.i ' MI Ni.s n  A Okv Maih.son ■ iMiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiii ' lltllllllMIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIMIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIillllllillllMllllllllllr illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll IIIIIMIIIIMMIIIIIIIIMMIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIi: FRATERNITIES SORORITIES riiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiMitiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir Patf fO} I Mtilllihillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli iiiiiiiiiillllilililiilliiililllllllliiillli: ■.liiik ' ( h..lnck ' llnvi- ,.u Ral thai cow milkcj yd ' I onK lounj three ckrn thiN morninR, iinJ one of them sanR to nie uhcn I picked it up. • I iJon t think we ' ll ha e enourth cuMiirJ to ko iiround No. r r . the foreKoinR natch o( con ersjit ion is not trom v mc rural conied ' , u coniraire it was heard hv the milkman the other morninR as he drove by the SiRmu Phi ' s country l ome on his wav to the city with his load of milk ' I ' he Rentlemen tarmers as the brethren are known in Mudison. raise all their own provender, d.. all their own work, and all subscribe to the Country Gentleman Their orKanizution was oriKinally a nxiuI fraternity, but their environment has gradually worked a chanBc and they have Isecomc in a true sense. ft(K d sturdy ycsimen of the soil ' ou w ill note the distincth ' rural atmosphere which surrounds their agricultural domicile I he ,S. .M ■ .. ;j . Mv Hi K1M ( itt I MXH.YN — As I (.xp .ctcd. the Thctas asked mc to pledge as soon as they found out I could tx n I and was cngafjcd t 5 a Russian stxialisi from New York. My future in the I ' niversity is now assured, for I ' ll be able to get on the Lit staff, and e erything The girls arc the sweet • est bunch and so influential in schix)! affairs .And jUst think! There is a girl in the house who is a real literary genius, and has a standing order from Snappy Stories for one story each issue. I know her real well al- ready She can act, ttx). But there. I sup- pose I ought not boast about my sisters, as we call each other, for it is quite the thing here to lusi take it for granted that if one is a Fheta one is all right. Gi e my regards to your folks Your Theta friend. ■■Ou, .V uW. . CuenMy Dear Sally: I am so happy I have Ken rushed by a sororit y, the .Alpha Phis, and they ha e asked me to |oin. The girK are all so feminine and lady-like and re- lintd and you know how I detest masculine apjxaring ;;irls I heir piirlor is almost like I leaven with the girls draped sylph-like around the big harp they have, and they pose so nicely that one doesn ' t mind their not being able to play It The girls are ery patriotic, too, and when they found out that one of them had once gone with a lellott who is now in the army, they got a great big st-rvice (lag and hung it in their window They are awfullv strong at Northwestern, loo. whatever that means (he (irst time I was over I felt terribly s ll-constious about my clumsy shoes and I wished 1 had put on that lace dress ii( mine One of the girls. Mane W ' llcoxon. has the cutest hat with a real imported chicken-leather in it The girls tell me that they practically run the L niversuy and thev are out lor everything ihtil g K-s on. s i as to K- sure t body connected wiih il Sincerely. .tiiiillilMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIMIinilir iiiiiiiiiiillilliiiiiililliiiilliiiiiliiiiiir IIIIIIIIIIIIIMinillllllllllllllllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIItlllllllllll iiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii: This synibi)!. ladies and gentlemen, is the fiimous Siumii N ' u --hield. or coat of arms It is a hit of heraldry which has lived long in the traditions of the hrotherhiKHd. and is passed on from (genera- tion to (jeneration as a isihle reminder of the motto of the organiia- tion. which says that the brethern Live faster. s[- cnd more monev, wear better clothes, and set drunk oftener than any other bunch in school. L ' nfortunately. Madison has been dry during the past year, and this has been a sad blow to the boys, who are hard put to it to live up to their reputation. This year they have gone into the publishing business, and their mjidcn effort in the new field of endeavor is shown on page 4 -13. It is in the nature of an expose, patterned, we believe, to a great extent .jltii Inn him Jems. It was published under the title of Th. Dk.xr Millii;: I m afraid I made an awful mistake. Mil- he You know I pledged Gammy Fly. and now I ' ve found out that they wont have . anything to do with any fellow who is an - J f 5B I . cacia. just because Frank Birch has some H V K  C SP pictures of some of the girls when they were L m r ' - aaj Sj having a party, and now I can ' t go with Bill. I Q i k , . H ' ' ' ' ' ' ' R ' ' ' chough, being in the house- is 1 ' M H like being in the Sunday school at home. Hk. 1 V ' . Kt l Hil l They ha e the swellest parties when they have us girls o er and there ' s a nice N.lrs. Brittingham who is always there. They go in for war simplicity, and they comb their hair straight b;ick over their heads in order to s;ive. but I don t think it impro es the looks of some of them to do it. at all. I he girls look almost like other human beings and in order not to be mistaken for them the other sororities got together and had S. G. .A. order them all to wear mufflers, and now you can tell them a mile away. Other- wise I think they are all right. Yours affectionately. Ct-.lai Ciim. Millit Dr. R l.r.oNA; urc into K. K G cnr . in worth $- lil riil with hi ' iinnt i) buv do hereby apply for od- wmrity. My futhcr owrw , and (in or m not) und ' what You know I wrote you that I had been to all the sororities but one ' ' Well. I was there last night for dinner. It is called the Kappa Kappa Gamma Sorority. .-V girl introduced herself to me on the street and siiid her name was Oschner und she invited me over to dinner before we had Ronc a block. Right away after dinner some of the girls took me up-stairs and I never went through such an ordeal in all my life. ' I ' hey put riK thrtxigh a regular third degree and iust forced me to take their old pledge pin I didn ' t mirxi It uS much, though. K-cause I had K ' cn cvcrswhcrc else arxl nobody hjid asked me to join, so this was my last chance. Thev are n lunn liunch. iiK)Ugli. tliey all wear imitation coon-skin coats to be distifKlive. and they picked them out because nobody else will wear them. Some things are said about them which I don t quite understand yet — vimething about their front porch being slippery and making it hiird to get in. but it was clejined nff nil right when I was there I m awfully glad I got in somewhere, anyway U rite soon. With love. Mion lUank fomuition rcftardina my vKia) MandlnR. lif am not) c in tJered vcrv exclusive nl Slalt on tntitt tidt o) ( lu curj u hnh- not yoti ate orui of .Muftini tivAfui j. and t.t yxnir farorttr hronj o cigorftUj Matt s card to the Chafuer al 1adiM}n. together wtth itr f icture and any oth(r injormation which tht hrit fit in fsiitinf on t ir merin at teatl TininiMiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir ' ' ■ ■ ' ••i))ii iiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ' :: M..il..r.ir rho.l.,Rici.l li HIE SCRIBES REPURl Toaslmaster : Let us pray. All: Ah, with the Grap e my fading Life provide, And wash my Eiody, whence the Life has died. And in a winding sheet of Vine-leaf wrapt. So bury me by some Wincgardcn side. — Omar. Bob: New members, 1 bid ye welcome, but lets not waste time pouring hot air out of our throats when we might be pouring something else in. EJoy, page the flowing bowl. (Applau,se ) Gene: It will be the highest cndcaxor of us new members to liquidate our debt to you. (Cries of Hear! Hear! ) Count: The Night Envelops Those Now Eating. The Natural Elation That Now Enlivens This Naughty Entertainment Typifies Nothing Else Than Necessary Enjoyment. Therefore, No End To Nectar Enchanting — Y. N. E. Keg: CXir motto, :hentlemen: Of all sad words of tongue or pen, the saddest arc these: ' We ' re dry again. ' Sherlock: Gurgle — gurgle — gurgle! Jack: Or dears, you ' re — hic — inefficient I ma most loaded a wrcady. Its a — hie — picazhurc to be wiih you onsh more — to come back for shome more — hey! don shpill at on me! — cr — hie — er — amen! (A pleasant time was had by all — who could remember it.) I ' ■!_ -.Ul I- V A ' M ' .| I ' HI ' ' H 11 M I ' llllllllllHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIItlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMlllllllllllllr l ' ,itr SOf JIIIIIIIIIMinilMinillllMMIIIttllllllllMllliniMIIIIIIIIIMI iiiiniii •• ' ■■•MiiiiiiiiiiiiMi: tdiiarrultit iif Bluruiiuln llmiiiy Writ ' s (Eljriatian Aamiriatiuu [•ic 1 wOLr Habuan IU7 - 1918 Grand Preallent, T. N. «.. iddlaton. Sear Raatag: I ' t« been wanting to  rlte to 70a for soma tiisa. Tiat I didn ' t know what to call yon till the program of your banquet was pabllahed. I ' ve heard about your inatltatlon eTer alnoe I waa a frosh, and I ' ve always wondered what T. I. S. Deant, bat every time I aaked anybody they Joat turned away their head and anlled, and It ' s only Jaat lately that I found out. and since I found out I have wanted to Join. I don ' t know how a person geta Into a frat, espoolally an honorary one, bat I saprose some sort of an application has to bo made, and that ' s why I ' m writing yoa. I ' d like awfally well to bo able to ■••.rite I. N. E. after my name in the 3nXcSt, and I know it woald miJce my father nnd mother very proad because I aa President of the Y U. C. i. too, you know, and this v.oiild be that nach more. If you nil I only consider my name for raemberahi:! I ODlsc yoo I von ' t jlve away any secrets about ' grips or high algns or anything, and If you require any reconntnd- atlons a3 to churacter or anything I know I oan get Prodcrlti: E. Wolf to write mo one. Hoping you will consider this application favorably, I remain, humbly yours. ■l Vi. V THY JOYOUS ERRAND RE-iCH THE POT where I MADE ONE - TURN DOWN AN EMPTY CLASST-o ah. nlllllMIIIIIMMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIinilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllMIIIIMIIItlllllllir Paf SO? MIIIIIIIMlHIIIItlllllllllllllinillllllli ' iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiit: Ol R SPEC:iAL POISON GAS -WAR TIME SECTION nil ,11 ' l ;n.- iM ihi rvmil.ir Wi-c ■ i-m in W ' .ir Tim. .jiio.T bc imins i PiU ' - - ' Our energetic photfi ruphcr iis t;ikcn dosMi tn l-r ink •; iind trc.itcJ to .1 vji h 01 icc cream by Ken Bahc if he would ' cc that this picture of his desk got in the BADGIiR. Note that with such an inspiration Ken uvcs no books, but the small date calendar at the extreme rit;ht occoupies a strategic position CA 10L1-LAGL£ AND 11 IL GAMMA I ' LAGE I I WAS the end of rushing week. I he Cjamma Elage ' s had pledged the usual number of clinging ines. And how they do cling to the sturdy oaks, especially at the I ,iiidy Shop ' .And there came along a damsel with a face like a hard winter, and her skirts were so long and nnxlest that no one could tell whether she wore silk stocking od.r j w ■ ! ■ ■ — ' - —1— ffii Y nicht The Cjamma Plage ' s cogitated, and then thev said: ■Fwiwniwc  « Vic e i-— m l n fVW m- i l-(Kik here ' I ' his woman will be a Phi liete ' How cle er ' l V ' nl M f l r ould l- e lo lake her to our Georgette Kisoms and get the • I ■ • ' ' ■S ' .ff I rep tor knowing brains when we hear them ' ' .S) they clam|xd the good old signK ard o er her heart, • nJ ihirc (.iirnc iiImiik .i Juiii l assigned her to the cojil-bin in the cellar and waited for mid- semesters I hey came . nd the sad s one s marks were four cons lusi like the rest of the sisters I ler lace and costume were oiil camouHage Moral livery nut is not u F ' hi Bele •tlKlllllllllliitiltllllllllllllllllllllMHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIillllli iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin MiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiimiiiiMiiiiii illllllllillllllllllllllllllllUllillllilllllllllllllll Al R ., „ Jl ' T ' l ' ■ • 6 -.11, Plo.,.llo • « -• i IV:, ' l oUr igK|« ' pi •l. ' irw I.-. I iiniiiiiMiniMi mimiiimmiumiiiimmiiumiiiiiH ' iiiimiiimimmmmmniimmir: .;lllllllllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllirillllllllllllllllllll ' ' iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii: I he tnllcuini; letter icu.s urittcn hy a f. altmlic en cj In cheet the fntmei M isconsin m m in the war can px. as a part oj her .ten ice iintler the H ar Li)iincil Probahly wc know each other think I know you. for I ' m pretty with all the los c of X X X X X 1v darling, brave sojer-boy: just a few lines to say how I miss your loving presence. ju t think! Probably we know each other, my dear. Were you that tall. dark, handsome fellow who used to dress so spiffy — and. oh yes. didn ' t you kiss mc once by mistake on the Kappa ' s front porch, thinking I was Ruth Petley ' ' I used to wear a bright green sport suit and stag it to the studio a lot Don t you remember me ' ' rhcrc ' s just more gore around schtxjl this year. We ' re having mixers instead of formal parties, you know, and we re all wearing our friends ' clothes for economy. We ' re just awfully patriotic, too. Betty Pruett ' s doing her war service by fussing all the men in turn. She gives precedence to the ones who are going to leave for war first. ' Sarge Wild knitting for you soldiers, too. ITie scarf he started turned into a hockey cap. though. Most all of us have been either burglarized or bombed Wc girls carry search lights and revolvers when we ' re out after dark. I wish you were here to protect me. my brav - boy. . ' fter telling you all this I feel as if we had a bond in common, don ' t you ' ' The delightful part is that I almost sure it was you that kissed me. ell. goodbye for tonight. XXXXX -.orrv ihi Uitii l typc .nu smuld take more than six CiirKms After being duly censored and rendered properlu I MPF,RSONAL by a Joint corrjmittee oj the y. M. C. A. and Y. W . C. A . composed of Carl Harris. Helen B. Smith. Ray Krlandson and K Iabis. the folloteini letter teas issued to the war camps: i iriMii, niiw in uaining prcpar.iioiv Rt lxxlcJ l.x-.StuJiiu wi iIk I his country : The Women Student ' s War Work Council extends lo you greetings and solicitations, in con- junction with commiserations up)on your absence from scholastic duties. It is confident, how- ever, that while training yourself in bravery, you are likewise schooling your mind in psychology, philosophy, and kindred subjects which should help you meet the end with fortitude ' l ie university has recently passed through the period of midsemesters. and lb anticipating recess, during which the seniors will make progress upon their graduating theses I he student directory, comprising M -) pages, was is LTT ' Rriidu Scnior will miikc pnvKrc s up sued early this yejir. on IXcemKr 2 Ihc Women Students ' War Work ( ouncil has done great patriotic service this year by writing impcr«)nal, newsy letters to soldiers Most im|XTs inally. Till-; IInivirshy ii- Wisi unsin. ' iiliillllllllllllllllllllllllltllllllllllllllllllllllliiin iiilllllllllllllllllllllii iiiiiir; Pate 10 IIIIIIMIIMIIIIIIIIMIIIIIMIIMIIIIinUIilllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII lllllllllllllllllllllMIMHIMIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIi: AS i-i-ATi R[;n m- K.Mabis ' Newest ScNG Sensation; ' I ' M SORRY I MADE YDU CRY 1 ? nr-r- i: ;ir!i.i.i i.itfii:iM:iV 1 THE WILD WILD WOMEN ARE MAKING AWILD MAN OF ME Ml r WR)W.TW ►mo N«[CKtL r. ' i ' DOfffmilL niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiMiiiiMiiiiiiii; Paf f I I • Mniiiiitiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiililllliilllliiliililiiiiii .IlllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllU Shame on the I hctu Baras! Kiippu s front piirch .Vc fwnv III i I kii K.ilio . I he Armv iind Navv l-nrcvcr. — Muhoncy . iiiiiiiiiiiiiiMMiiiiMiiiiiiiHiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin Pa,, SI! iiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiimiiiiiiimiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii MtiKiitiMiiiini iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinr And he smote her on the nether cheek. — Jami ' i W hilc }mh Ritcy. NOTE   ol Rudy . irainni ir. ip •( i iarofcrtrrt arc hlam«d ht ihu HoncM. iho ' JhJ f lUvhuh. hnnot n truly We makr (hi oAkial MaKmcni tn ofder thai ihc girlt mav «hn ihew rwturo m f ilk hack himic niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiMiiitiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiMtiuiiiMiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiirtiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinuiiiiuiiiiiiitr: Pan fl I uniiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiililliiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiin iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiirririiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiu It has come to ry attention that you are larrled, an that fabt maJiea U sy painful duty to warn you against having any more dates with anyone but your hustanl. I realize. oi ccurse, that It Is very harl for a pcrular Irl llks yourdelf. living with the very creas of ' jniverolty society, to sulilenly find all her social pleasures curtailed, slaply because she got serried anj her husband is away, but such are S.G.A. ruleal! Vcu should have thought cf rhat when ycu sirrled hlc. Pl«ase consider sy wishes in this ratter anl to not again let we hear of your going out with a -rale escort other than your husband. uiy ( y Ksi. in Mai iv.s s Low Uivlis iimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilllllllllllllllllllllllllllli ' ' illMIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIMIItMIIIIIIIIMIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIItlllir I ' ait fit Wmln €utHtml SPECIAL BADGKR COMIC SUPPLEMKNT THE OMgPtTa; OR. y C -cr)A o you t . _ .p : j vo i ' D O . O £- i £7 ay- TO £: c rw a lje Wml €ntUnul Ol I ICIAI. ORGAN OK THK CHI Pills STUDES STAGE RIOT AT STUDIO VARNEY ' S ATTENTIONS TO 3-F QUEEN CAUSE BIG BRAWL Cod Iniured: Ebe Simpson Wrecks Door; Goo iigti! Now Investigating bold Mil Huld. Mil n to tbe Pollcff aUlloii I I and lodKod In Jail Th -: balled out by Prr«lOt n FomwisiN down knd tbroQich thp door. Conl Fran PMbllcllr • bit him. ibr tortr Cool T)io9« Brrcsird wore Cawy Jonn Barl Gforice WaltU. Bob Drown Ebffr Sim|tson, Verne Varncy, Ke nnhr. Kanny Ward and WDIIar Baldfniun nritrnt-i l ay lUII y r Iloyd. owopr of ihc rami 3boi . said tbe Iom was bo xnai h did not think he could icrt U rt-i.airi. for som lime Ho. howr i r. wai no Rolnn to puib pro « atlona a th l r Bldrnt ha4 lald be would M (h«T wu no prrx ' j; Kl o( Pr (. C, 0. Cool. -, biOwl.-llKl- i t Ev.. (Court .y Crir l S....C-. Aa ttrBf-rallT followa a flicht b« i iw«wB •mdral and town p«opt4 tbr i %lad«nii maoaced to « t oot. bur p oatr • trr Ibvy bad torn up the place aad wrrtfhrd br Interior ceaerall; r Proa the natct tread et the say daacer to the bowliac aocry riot of ' Ibe tnfartated Acblera waa Doard of Rrcri Oabe STUDENT SENATE TO HELP FUSSERS TO GET TOGETHER Laxness on Part of Men of Uni- versity Causes Worry to Scions apr 4 h? Ibr rr tirfpp«4 b; tbi ■bead of raen Police ,,, con ened In g ami iranMCled rery Important bu Ineaa It •eema that too many of ll • ro-eda are lan- loUhlnc away ibeir of the lack of •wro rts The mailer Waa arfiied pro and con and while no •umed ibat aom - iln ne aoon ihe mat ter will rame tn a cllmai or aome- nite nature will llefore adjourn) nx ib« aenaie paaaed a r Mlatioa ■iinlfriBs (beir FRDSH m BftTHE ' JFIEB LONG BEST Prexy Gives Final Edict: Says Thai Goodnight Is Not Boss Here ' ll at one. •Dd uain Ibr rr Hli : • ' ll « H I i ,.„ ,„,fc. Ion, .Qoutb lo , Thi.  • Ihf ..rdlcl lUfn lo Rar ! ' ' ■ ' • ' l C Krl«nil« n U l rvcnini br Pr. 1- ! ' ' ' ' • doni V.n lllu  brn Kriandion Inloklni aa bo i •box-d IT. ' iJ a ilalrnK ' nl from Iho ••™ • ' ' • ' Clinic l Ktva abowlnic Ibal Iho! ,,. , rroab wrri rriWj BafTorlnK (or lark ; of hoi «alrr pfrvloualy furnl«h«d I PIBG IS DOilEO F.uiinus Feminist Fills Filadler ' s Fops With Fetid FooJ- ishness Patriotism o! the True Lit Type Prevails at Monthly Gathering 111 make tha nd tbe Fac- ■liakr Laura Dean JIbby at lb meetlnc of the- Forem laat durlnit her apeeirh oo Uy t for Ibe Counlr). but My Body ftood loeblBf (Irla left arbe bavMnlni of Ibe avmevivr di flla -e |i added I B ' MK« ' ml B ' Owndee- ••II ■•ide ' Mef lle e Heed. L- el- Q.a ' be ' t l L.f h-(. DAD AND ED ARE PAPAS: NO- THEY ' RE NOT MARRIED in Itaeir anill the real ■ anderatood asd lh n )o« 4 Folio Inc ibe | lan for««l|ai d hy lb iToriely of Pbyto-|iatbolo«y at tba brclnning of fbf • ' mt ter. theae tw« Wta (be aond that mnr trtim IW not to be fortotion Pn «bra ae t r thai tb y haie d ld d lo adofH aa Dtpban iKltlam and rait lb •■•• ari-han on Ihe moarr they ha4 PKor . 8 If Yo - o«. AtkUlea a W ar Wa BE A BETA! Wc PlrJgc Americans, I jlollctirs and Norwegians Tommy T,. k,, MlU.uk.c S nlm,! «. R.tl R.cl .-arc W,..-.. Ou Cr. M,r. F. c„ T,a,„ C.„. U. aCK.nr, ' THE DAILY CARDINAL Wonderful Opportunity DO NOT MISS IT For .1 rf.iHon.ililc com- prntwitioii 1 will (linpose of my wondrrful stand III will, tl.r ladi.- . SEE ME lirforr it in too Inte. DAD GROSSER COURT QUIEBLE OVE R CUSSING SETTLED B Y S. G. A. RULE BOOK BURLY ' S BULL TO AID BIG BAND BUSINESS Thda Refuse Sislern Pcrmil to Swear in Big Damage Suit rial for lh« righU of ih wtittifn i M I llurllnii no l aKd « Al IM Umn Ur IUlli«« t« |.|K l in at)d, at tbo urc ni r -iur«i ' t tl r T iDombm lo • ar uh«Hl ibKt ho lad) In qucMlon tv r qu b«d MalhTM Hcorr Al -bfir o«i iniportani p rt o Kntino ' «Uar . Rtnrrlcaho lulairi upon ibf llvre Mn Uklhcwa pulird Ibf brtt or  A • Mfrr •i« r«oi whrn ihK ■ k(Hl lb rkan nf Smrrtrnho b«-fti to w« ir hr il tUl d from the ni r« fihuiograpb atioacd ab olul«l Ho a t iplalnl«K tht ntullk II wu. I lh t IB lb CDdr I. luiioB or A A . MVItC tl f n bi- mKd« ord r or ih f |o r int l hff i a of lb ud pftna ol ih« murt pr« d«r 4 i« r h« rut «nd Mrt If II «t )• tb r (erlklBly lb«T Khov lf 9l mimMm mwm prolu  «. THE DAILY CARDINAL Woman ' s Page (FounJcd with Alpha Flee!) S« ' lw Sp«ft Iey (B«i Journ litlmS:hooO..-,_EJiior D d Gio Kf™-Oiice Pmnlitne AMuUnt to S lbe u«« t««th«r and t ath bui ' it lk«v b« b « ao turtbtr cir ti him. ClrtA. w« MUST •cooooll : Girts. Watch Your Step kMpfrt rrs« a tor L«D _; wck«4 up i t atgbt wu the tboArt bo dr ft SATISFY THAT DESIRE! Before it t, ' rows cola. DANCE At the Union Cost Dance. Attendance limited to 800 couples. We must be able to jam the doors snut. (b i Mocwl Tb« « y b ClMTit roBpMir Scarcr I . Dor CAr«ful of ib« companr ' cbooM- !!■ •care and w« •H; rd boea . for «• coald kU«Dd tb« ' xb • Hi i« ibTc «■ «« tir u Dal Clfli. WE malt do onr I for lb «ar sod «by oot at ) ' an and writa lo tboa d«r boj bav 10 b« witboai (u aad arr | LAOT TONSORIALISTS TOO I loot from ,1 MUCH FOR GRISWOLD i, ' nZ 4°Jo ' ;. HP b f( PromfKnl Junior Hurt in Rush lo ■■ ' - i New Heassler Bartxr C.r. ' n T ' Shop T ' ' V  party and tb« fni tb« HI aloai to dU • Thrr wtTa no Runkel ' s Rest Room Never nicks a customrr We have shaved Prexy Van H.se. Eddie B.rgr, Red Kcllcy. Bill Schwartz The view from our window is unexcelled Midway between (he Pi Phi ' s and Kappa ' s Bring in ycnir saws — we ' ll sharpen thcmt bod of pro -«0ur4 ttMthmt ihoQ op«aMl br I SkMvn. G«rTr«4« aad H la IB a aMlevs ci Dw 10 Uta barb«rt ' r aa «  4aia pia t College Infectionary Soup-Houftc De-Luxe Now und r Ih mana mcnt of Gimme Lucre Brown Succeuor to Je««e JAtnea YEARLINGS ABLE TO TAKE BATHS ■ fim pvraod b« aaw waa D«ai al do ro« tbiah of tblt baal I riab 1 11 1 do FOREM HOLDS BIG PATRIOTIC RALLY Fuller Theatre Spni Tralurc Filit Miss Paul Rudy Lady CodiTB ' a Ri J« VClOO Dldrrcnl Scrnr. I •  « AlapK-M of T II A Join the U. S. A. Ijilrat Co-op Salea Syatcm. Rrfunds (or •ofm-thing we hav«. Givca rKoice briwern « non- W kabU pen and a Ford. Refunds on thing we have ' acLvtM Rcfurtda (tof ntce tP all oih«T Mock J m fin shc«l I thr fraA wiih i rho tbr 8a aa arrvytvd aa4 n Vri r PUMmI Aut t«p M of (h« atnod aad aaitK Tba Star Spaa- PrMldaal Van Mlac b « KB ahMic and b «i -„ ,y.„,.. PHI MP PUBLICin STUtfT LANDS PONO IN COOLER TtfE DAILY CARDINAL SENATE TO ELECT SPECIAL FDITORIAIS D JP WM L n HALLOWE ' EN OFFICERS .Ul 1 UKl AJ S— Kcad tm! (Not by Bur- Th« Sludtml ftrr Imyame.) SOCIETY-DaJ Grosser, Editorcss. S. A.LsFE£L NEED OF OWN FILLING STATION SliEma Alpha Epslloo I lOUII • Drw Slum Uall pro rly on lj ke ktrorl AHENTION ' 2n SATIRE EDITOR! I h..vr ., (.w l.f, „vrr I from Shui which I will dii jpotc of at n rfAtonnbU prirr G«orge Anundion Made-in-Germany Haircuts Tlir IViltr.il Detention Camp. 620 State H. Singer, chief guard All Gossip in German Our Barljcrs all wear the Irort Cross BARNUM AND BALDWIN BRING KALE TO KEEP KAROINAL DuBi brouctil Ihr lUroa S lM[D«n lilp Club wat nllnKl oblaln«d «ROue i to Vrfft Xhr offli-v open uti- ot krhool TlifM rtvaU In t Knibtiinc nurlivn ouidr itir Oiitlv ■ pip - ftk f.tr a ili new drtuniD ' nl w a can- Cirnrd and It was onir by Ihrlr mm krpt lht MaJT iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim: ye A l(|uarium Drink Blatz Foaminji Oldstyle A Nickle a Tickle 7 Raps and a scream brings Gene Basement Door of D U House WiiATUias Nkxtlbm ' -illllllllinMIIMIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIillllllllllllllMlllimillllMlllllllinilllllllllllMIIIIMIMMIIIItlllllMIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIir Pait f:i I ' iiiiiiMiiniiiniiiiiiitiMiiiiitiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiMilllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllL ' Vakni Y IIik: SiiiY Blirit. (;i)i i Ni .Mr (H.k io .) Woi i I V.wj W im IHli lANKS IN AC ' IION (Stcni: I liaJguarurs ol MidJIcn.n A Uiix allacfc is in nnmriNv the cntmv advuncinK  ilh ureal luanlilio . air but vuccumhiriK bcd.rt- ihc lu|Uid lire Ivimclimcs calltJ liri-waUr l i( llii- defense- Manv dead v.ldiers i n lymK uniund and C.enerul Contusion is in command I .cd up. Are we all loaded for action be put down 1 le must K- literallv edcriek Wolf ■Here, by C.cn {■. ; Men. the enen :hi. ■ Well shav sivi ' Gen C: : ■Disorderlv. call the hit— rol Disorderly I ' i li Wallis) lluyd Sull Here, ean ' l you shee me ' L BurlinKame Here — s to vou lioh Her: (No response 1 Wolf (On senlrv duty) llalC Who noes there ' Uobllcrj. doddum if Advance, and ttive the lurKh-counter-sijin ' ' ' Plunk ' Kocs a dollar on the Isar i Wolf Cairretl ashell Pass on 1 After oblaininK sirateKie [sositinns around La Mont du Kaiu. which is locate J just a ' sove the tails in I he old llr .ct. a vicious counlerallaek is Ixuun on a reuiment of picked Ivips. stninulv entrenched IsehinJ a pan ol pret: cr u buttle ramnu from ' I (Ml P M until) (H) A M our continuent Ixats a strutemc retreat, sinmnu lustily I J iiitJiin. as a isersonjl friend, show me rhc uav to ko home l Speukinu al ut Si ns. iVifia. l-ltc iMiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin illllllllllllllllllllllllinilllllllllllllMIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIMIIp-: TWAS HVER THUS or A Study in Pencil I ( mu lii AVu l injtal or tu to j(ru.i i these leui Ml ref resentotn-e itruwtngi jronx the ome t luul tin ul art colled ion uhuh so fittinnly aJorns the sani.i J u- tUs of the S G. A room in l.athrot - . Stii-. bfKiwkD A Lot of Back Bone Hk Kki-i A Stii I- Uim-ir Li THIS IS OUR BUSY DAY! 1 II S Cittiniilv c-ndcth the- S;itirc Section (xintmry to the usual custom, the editor will not leave town the day the hook comes out. but instead, he will receive visitors all I he hiessed day in the B.AOGER oflKc. where he will sit in state, surrounded by blcxxl-hounds. atlin) guns, and other parapher- nalia of sclf-dcfcnsc All callers will be welcome, and the presence of the hounds issures that the reception will be a howling success Yes. sur- rec ' OmsidcrinK the guns and all. the affair will be some blow- . ut ' .Vs an added attraction, our own inspiration (pictured at the loft I will be there in person Oh. boy Yaaka Hula Hick. TllllllllllllllllllllltlltllllllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllillUlTITinTTTIIIITinfTtlllllllllli Hotel Cumberland NEW YORK Broadway at Fifty- rourtn Street Broadway Ciars from Cjrana (central Depot 7th !$ivenue Cars from Pennsylvania Station Special R.ate5 For College Tear and Students MODIRN IIRI.PROOl 11,,,, I ' S.im-.n. ., Kept liy a Colle;;e Man Hcadquarter, for Collet- Men TKc CumlicTlancl Docs More College Business Than Any OtKcr New York Hotel Ttn minutes ' waH to fifty thiattrs Hoom, with Hath $2.50 up I Icadquartcrs tor University dI Vv ise-onsin HE Milwaukee Journal — a fair, square, construc- tive, truly American newspaper. It is intell ' gently edited for intelligent readers. I: presents the worth- whib opinions of noted Wi iters, the most interesting special features and world news secured by unrivalled news gathering facilities. t|That is vA-.y today, read in more than 1 20,000 Wisconsin homes, it is Wisconsin ' s Giant Newspaper. BOYD F I C n T E N ■ S TWO STORES 4Jb STATE STREET 19 N PINCKNEY ST Baillio- Hedc]uist Co. 1 he Xcchwcar House o) XIadison HOME OF SOCIETY BRAND CLOTHES U ' earinj Apparel Furnishings That Sat sfy the Student Body iVW I S A ISIT 11 W 11 1. WW ov ttTalLltHCO Kit CClCtOTHTNC, ) ullruii ' iija trni!sl)iui) Qoiiii i. MADISON AVENUt COR. roRTV-rOUHTH STRICT T.Ul ' l:.; ;.■•..•. . ' .- lOOTH ANNIVERSARY APRIL 1918 . . , ■. i:staMishiiK-ni npt ' iatfii ' uniiiiuoiisly for One Hiiiulrcil ' ears under the same name ami still in the control of the Direit Desiendaiits of the Koumlers for the Oultitlinn i t Men and Boys from Head to Foot with Garments and Accessories for K%ery Requirement of Day or Evening Wear Dress, IJusiness, Travel or S|«irt St lid for llluslriilcd Calaloguf and Ctnttnary Booklet Uniforms for Officers in the Service of the United States K)P f4vk - cck rmon (a . OliO . W ISCONSIN ' ou will find all that is best in WOMEN S. MISSES and CHILDREN S APPAREL — t-ARRirs and ACCESSORIES Also the larRcst und mot complete stock of Imported and I )mcsnc CJ ETGNNES. RLGS CAR PETS and DRAPERIES in Vladi on i ' RICES ARE NOTABI.Y MtHJliR A I I i M -.j4 Mk il r M. H «- V V . TT ' ' CS K-j .• -- j A dviid K c away J 525 STATE STREET DE LONGE BUILDING t e 10 Nursery Posinti Room Reception Ro WK MAKE K.st;il.lish.M| ISIM liicnr| ir:it. ' (l Inixcrsity Cx)-Opcrati ' e ( ompany I ' hc Stnrc I hill 1 Ouncd and CuntinllcJ h y ihc S I u J c n I ■: 16.4()() StiHlfiils have taken out meiiilifisluiis in The C.o-Op and have liad tlieir ojilion of a ca.sli or a trade rebate at the end of eaeh school ear. HOV OCH BrslNKSS RA8 GROWM IN KIOimtBN TKARS BouRht by Added Paid Stock- Vrw Sda Mem ben Net Proliu Surplua holdiD - proxiniaU ' ly Rate Per Cent IS96 ( 9.434.52 t 4,215.50 t 316.07 t 105.35 t 210.72 .Vr in Merehandiflc I8 7 13.090 44 4,046.80 607.02 202.32 401.68 10 r in Merehandiw 18 S 16.199.43 6.396.75 1.336.65 538.29 788.33 12 ' . 1899 29,303.78 13.068.60 2.403.31 801.05 1.602.36 10 ' ; in Ciwh. or 12% in Trade- 1900 33.805.99 18.037.67 2.2S2.20 478.44 1.803.77 9 -„ in Ciuh. or 12 ' ; ii Trad,. 1901 3S.0O9.l4 18,309.14 2.744.76 713.76 1.830.99 9 ' n inCa.sh. nr 12 ' . in Trade 1902 40.320.05 20,827.18 2.215.48 1.020.00 2.082.02  ' r inTMh. or 12 ' . , in Tra.lr 1903 4S.070.29 23.647.68 2.573.87 1.187.. SO 2.386.45 9 ' -; inCMli,nrl2 ' •.. ' , in Tra.lo 19M 4S.772.07 27.2W.46 3.508.74 1.617.42 2.7-20.45 Ifl ' r inCaiih. i r 13 ' r ii Trull- 1905 52.498.07 29.019.10 4.015.46 1.672.13 2.904.91 10 ; inCa..h. or 13 ' ; ir Tra.li- 190« 53.150.52 32.000.00 2.8X9.40 1,357.50 2.560.00 S ' v inCiwh. or 12 ' -, ' , II, Tni.l,- 1907 74.390.75 38. t0.61 4.126.70 1.763.53 3.495.65 9 ' r in(Mli. or l:i ' , in Tra.l,- 1908 90.002.85 47.969.58 4.188.62 2.243.78 4.188.62 « ' ■; in ' a. h. or l:i ' , ii Tra.li- 1909 100.S70.5S 43,746.47 5.100.02 2.467.57 5,463.62 9 ;, in ra..h. ..r 13 ' , in Tra.lp 1910 II3.73S.75 66.758.16 6,264.72 5.188.52 3,830.84 O ' r in ( ' a.Hh. or 13 ' , in Trad,- 1911 117. 787. 3« 69,720.28 12.411.17 2.877.14 7.756.47 10 ' ; inCiwh. or IT ' , in Trade 1912 123,959.11 69,720.28 12.641.98 2.835.63 10.653.91 12 ' r in CmIi. or 211 ' , in Tra,l,- mi 127. 368. S3 79,780.06 13,353.60 3,422.17 12,787.37 12 ' :;, in Casl.. or 22 ' , ii Traile I9M 135,741.71 79.313.10 11.935.72 170.00 16.812.96 KC ' r in Cub, or 20 ' o in Trade 1915 141.410.99 87,800.00 12.092.99 634.00 14.715.87  ' ■„ ill CmH, or 17 ' i in Trade 1916 142.280.10 105.386.06 12.836.35 901. M 14,069.51 K ' : in Caah, w IS !, in Trade I52.0M.S8 8.391.57 13.835.83 ■ Fetnary 6. 1917. to Dmnba ' 31, 1917. TWO F .arch; stores Books Slatinnerv Tupeirriters Office Supplies Engineenmi Supplies General Merchandise Militart; Et uipment Men ' s Furnisfiin( s Athletic Supplies Sportiny Goods Auto Tires Shoes THE CO-OP .S04-50.S State Strt-L-t Sludcnt Outfillcrs Madison, Wisconsin Pof t29 Fred Garrett }3luttiuuayhrr 19 West Main Street TELEPHONE b.?4 -— 11. C Nether vood Printino Co. i A 1 leadquarter for Fine btationery. Greeting Cards. Dinner and Tally Cards, Engraving Die Stamping and [i 11 i 24 N. Carroll Street Madison, Wisconsin ou arc always wellMressed if you wear Hart. Schdffhcr (!L Marx Clothes Manhattan Shirts Stetson Hats Olson Veerhusen Co. M.kIi-.oii VI i cnnvin .p- CUimc you x:bcn ' Hcah port unity ' Listen to mc. honey dice— oh. buby ' Look ot that ' llcjihs yn ' chjincc to uivc relief to my impicunity ' I l.iir u dollar this time If I lose I m busted flat ' ' Carl Thomas J hotogra h er Madison, Wi isconsin Nineteen Years Contmuous Busme PHONE ' 2407 C H. S A N N ES INSTITUTE Mcc..n..-El,:ctr.. ..nJ IlyJ... Thcraphy 317 STATE ST.. MADISON, WIS SwtJisk a«aj Electro Vibratory Vio- let Ray Treatments. MassatJe and Medical Gymnastics. LaJits TurkUh BacA - Steam and Electro Cabinet. Salt Glows and Showers. Pine Needle Extract Baths. Fine Rest Room. 5«uryPar or — Shampoo. Scalp and Facial Treatment. Hair Work. Manicur- ing and Chiropody. Gardner s Reaucinj Machine Fir,-.t-Cla .s Operator- Phone 4977 for afipointmcnts .0 . RGU lE r -ABOUT CXX D PRIX r INC, Blicd [ riming Co. ALW.VIS SATISr-IES PHONE J75 irtivt drrw thi.i picture, intending it to be a to of ELrnic - Meyer, but mvcstii on diKlo.ed the _ , f.cl ih.t Meyer did r lion diKloaed the lad that Meyer did not even have a trunk _J V en he came to Mad- laon. « it must CJT ' ' L have been hi. valine Horsman Tennis Rackets Un,ur ass,d in 38 Ytars jl81fl!!!? |L T n n ; pUy , ' ' ' ' ' ° ' ' [ 1 Do .ot ..Ud . Racket for 7 ' ' f 1918 until you ha«  c the Horsman oJrfs J W,..r..S.. , r .S ■D..r..l.m.r. Wr,i, ,rC.r.ll„ E. I. Horsman Co. v ' ' , v ' ° . ' f ' ' IheWisconsin eJq State Journal M h l I (A T II E I. SI I. I h. ESTABLISHED IN 1839. THE DAILY ISSUES OF THE WIS- CONSIN STATE JOURNAL HAVE BEEN A LIVING IN- DEX OF THE PROGRESS OF THE BADGER STATE FOR MORE THAN THREE-QUARTERS OF A CENTURY 1 no State Journal rou nt ' itn Ltnjoin to save our country ana to tree tne Mack race. The State Journal rignts with Wilson today to 9a e our country and to tree tne white race An evenin( daily teaturing iorei( n and domestic new? United Press unmatched domestic and roreign news service markets, woman s pages, and the best sport page in Wisconsin. State Journal editorials arc read, clipped and quoted more than those in any other Badger newspaper The State Journal has the largest circulation or any newspaper in the State or WLsconsin ' Milwaukee excepted). rR()(;REssi E. rvinioTic. uty l is every ii e Paradise Farm Food Produdls bring nature ' s best gifts of the orchard and garden to your table, flavored with all the blended goodness of rain and .soil and sunshine. VKGh.TABLl-S COFFEF. FRUITS TFA PRE5RRVF-S CHOCOLATE In Convenient Pachatics at our Grocers GOl ' l n. WI-.LLS BLACKBURN COMPANY D I .S T K I H LI T O 1 S ! lASW ' R LL FrRxrrrRi ' CO. THE HOME 01- GOOD l-t RMIi RE CLAYTON W 1 lASW l-.I.t.. Prcs und 1 rcas. W ' c Prepay All lM-ciL;hi Wc Cji c A (-ash Discount c SatistV Our (Aistomcrs We Arc Glad to Adxcrtise in the Badger ' Ko wide Cover on this Annual Furnished bo The David J. Molloy Company 633 Pl mouth Court i Chicago :-: Illinois i| Samples of our decorative line of Kowide covers cheerfully furnished to your hinder upon request. Continue Its Enjoyment and Benefits T H E R I C I . .1 . U .1 , •: D M . K Now ihut Horlick ' s has served you during college days as a quick, satisfy- ing luncheon, and as a refreshing, sus- taining Food-Drink after study and exer- cise, extend its benefits to vour vocational life. No matter whether you are to be occu- pied in the office, the home, upon the farm, or in the service of your country. Horlick ' s Malted Milk is as adaptable one place as the other. It serves as a nourishing Food-Drink for all. being effectively utilized by all ages in sickness and in health. Horlick ' Malted Milk LUNCH TABLETS concentrated nutrition, sustaining, ready-to-eat are being used by our Sol- diers and Sailors when tired or hungry in camp, on the march, in the trenches. In handy pocket flasks and ration packages. Purchase -Horlick ' s ' - by NAME to get the ORIGINAL Malted Milk HORLICK ' S MALTED MILK CO R f I N I Dance P oJ am vMlh 41 National Riputation ' 1 h e Print Shop ( ORMiR |}R(XAI n I,(1R1I 1 )l£SIG ERS PRINILiRS l£NC,R. 1:RS I he- I ' rnlcvsjoniil An in this l- ai-l fr is (uir work Grand Theatre Hi h C w, .v j lotiort ' Ptccurc.-i STATE STREET ORPHEUM I 1 1 s t C lass a ud (_■ 1 1 1 f FULLER ix) r f- . ii. lo m:i- B.ilUcr-lon ' s Baby Betas or l.(K)kinL; Out lur llic luluu A (.Rli, T PRKI ' ARI :i l ss fllAI |i)H I ' llX.hsos VSOrlll H I PARK i; IIIXKSOX b44 STATE STREET Hi Ilia rds Ci($ar9. Cigarettes and 1 obacco LUNCH and COLD DRINKS BUTTER KIST POPCORN tSVnv your A ma Staler. Serve yoiir counlry loo, Thorc oj III in Afai iion Are very firoiiJ o you hich hjisn t linylh ' nu to dc with hnir- ciit-.. bul It doc rcprc -nt our -1 ritiiiH nl I n h 11 K LI n k c 1 And the rest of the vv. here TK : Best PUcc to E.it b38 State StrCL-l FRED MALTZ S 2 3 I II I f r M 1 A f n u e Cigars — Billiards Malted Milk Headquarters for DRV ST r OF. NTS s= I he origin i)f real j:j:: mu-.ic (ITn; (iHuri.- is iilrriDst anv one of the sisicrnj OlicT Your I- r lends KEELEY ' S Old Fashioned Chocolate Creams They may think vou extravagant when they taste them, bul while there are no finer choCQ. latcs made, the cost is only Thirty Cents per Pour J Box They arc a revelation Buy a Bo, Today Made onlif in Madison by KFXLEVS PALACE OF SWEETS M.idison, Vtis ,ins,„ CHOCOLATES iiic uirrs Mad. on s largi St clea niniJ pl.int u tnriintt (Lnuipiiiiu ■The Hou, • „ Qu ,hty 5.38 Sta f Street Phor cs 1180. i.iita B c r n a r d s B oat L. n L ' ON LAKE MKNDOTA Sch ■Julcd P ,hU • f auttchi- , Chorur La uu-lu; Tcl cpho, c .17.5 Oakwo od 40-R.l F rank Bro thers 1 Vl,ll STORIES It; oloalc . irul Retail G ocerics. Fruits and Vegetables 6H Univci.il . .2689 niONEs , 53J5 Ave. Simc « Ji.h ..on Si, •ONE 868 Herman Mack Qiialit!) Grocer - Co fee Roaster I ..iiiplilr I. Ml.- i.f Slli|ili ' mill K:ll.r (.roiiTii-. l- ' riMlMinil Vi-Kitiilil.s Al All lillK ' N ll ' .l Sllllf SlriTl j.,„„„, ' ll ' : 7 u Oiam Truit Coinp.ny in the St.t« o( Wl comin ' JrtL ' Saving ' s Loan and Trust Company CAPITAL AND SURPLUS. $300,000 Debentures Certificates Savin( .s Trust. Pays 4 Per Cent for Money- Make Your Deposits by Mail Money to Loan on Real Estate Security STEENSLAND BLDG MADISON WIS. 226 5 i 6 c H WKST OILMAN n n Best Cooked Mtah In .S-,vr,l (.„ I..il,r. .n.l laJiMn Ontlrmrn ■rhe Hold of Ihc Hour REPUBLICAN HOUSE MILWAUKEE. WISCONSIN Headquarters for the University of Wisconsin Students HERMAN O. KLETZCH. Monagr, W. C. MALONE 4.U STATE STREET GROCERIES FRUITS VEGETABLES Phone 1 I6J or 1 1 4 and You Will Receive Quality. Sfnicf. Sa ' i3f action .n Evcrv Or.l.r iggins In .h:nt,a,„n,lnk.la.. ■ Mucllatr. r yUn MounU, r..Ur. D.aulnl Board I ' attt. Liquid ■u« . Office Paiu. ItltlahU Clu,. tU . a; Ih, hlSh.Sr ai ' i Ut.S I COODS of Itlh.lR Kl n Emancipalt u urtrlf fro ' n tht ute •■I .o o Jc an. in-,.nrll,nt ink . ■■ ajhttint and ajop ' Ihf flifiirf !• and AdhiHa, Thtv iclll  ' ' tt lalion to i ou. th y are to ■ • • ' . ritai. utll pul up. and itllhal t  tficltrtl. it OtalrrM generally f.S rUKS. M. HICGINS « TO.. Mln Bf. •:lt - Chi 271 Ninlh St n. ' K.vu N 1 c ) n k 1 1 .-, ir So n S C () m p a n y Co. . . WooJ and f .m ,. t. I. A ■ Lr MaiJi! or . W..C on in ALSO ' ON THl ' . SQUARI. ' WITH THE STUDENTS I his IS ;i simp I k- Klonns lo i Ir.:- tcrnity f Ic n ' t ' n when nuKxJy wus Umkinn Ihc hnilhirs wish that he would « « out the same wiiy Hut he won t I le never hrinns a man to the house JurinK the open season lor pit-dues I le is never on hiind helore sthipol starts to help wash the windows and clean up When the sidewalks are to tv shoveled he always has an ei ht o clock When there is work to he done after a dance he always has an errand to take him away I le is worihl.ss I le is a simp Rim by Wisconsin Men Get A Trench Flasher With An All-Metal N . - ' v. Case- . X. 4. X In Colors X y f ll.ishliKlit. tilronecr, S l KInsher ' battery— Kunr- LiM lliannny olhernnshlicht hatlery used under same M k Atk Your Dealer J Fmith Battery C rbon Co. V 20lBaltcr 8Mj..Mad,..,n.Wi . MidJPLi Diamonas. W atclifs, btcrlini Silver. Jew (.-Iry, Fine btationorv Bundo ■ Upmeyer Co. Jewelers -Milwaukee Corner Grand Ave. tsi West Water St Our own brand of Bon Ami. Hnsn ' i scratched yet. Samples on exhibition by (id Vise. Pete Burns (al a A Starr Worst), and Company. Scbu i er5 Stu6io Telephone F ' airchild 562 No. 20 Last MifHin Street Post Office Block Madison ' s Latest Plat LAKE FOREST In the noodcd hills across Lake ' in ira These heaiitifiilluts uill rapidly increase in value with the com- pletion of our development work, which provides all the modern conveniences, including Street car service. I hcM.- I wo pictures )irc inltrprctJiliM- ul ihc spirit ol tlw Rush, iicoirdin m the artiste Ncnicc thc iiurii to the west of the figure in the le(t hiind picture I he iirtiste displays his powers of suKKesCicin very rruirkedly here In conclusion it may K- s uJ thiit the picture to the left is real- istic, while the one at the right is idealistic in ihe exireme, Ironi the Siph viewpoint ' ' By [Jtcir deeds yc sJndl know tJicm Quality — Service — Satisfaction UNIVERSITY SUPPLY ASSOCIATION le College ook Store Cor. State and Lake Sts. Nearest the Campus Be Loyal and trade at the U. S. A. FA ERYTHING IN UNIVERSITY SUPPLIES [ or Students and I aciilt ' Prompt Xttention Given to Mcul (h Iers C ' hicasio ' s most refined people liaNe for ears enjoyed the Hotel Del Prado Service U: i- i B !i liulivi(lu:i!s or fumili-s who conu- l C.liiijiuo for :i f.« chivs. or possihlv to lorulo r cTm:incnllv. niav :ilso rnjov Ih.si- cl.-li(jliiriil f.aliiros of Ilomi- niul Serial life. Our rales ar.- all f|iiolfil on llic nKTiriin I ' liiii an l ixccicIiiikIv riasonali ' i- al Ihis si-ason of the v.-ar. Ilavi ' Kill liriiilil. |.■1IIII rnoniK with balli. I.OC.A ' I ' ION (111 lllc !Mi l a l l iil - aril. riKill al tin- rnlranrr (o Jarksnn fark. Orni- iiviiiR llu- ciilirc hlork hetwiTO HIarksloii,- Ui.ul.varil ail l Dor.lK-sti-r Avi-iiiu- Jus! oik- shorl lijork from llu- V.llli Slri-.-l Slalioii on llu- Illinois Onlral. whirh lakes vou down lown in I ' i niinnles You Kel all llu- luxuries of llu- eounlrv and llio rilv while liviuj) al Ihis rommodiniis hotel. The splendid dinins room farilities and perfeet service add murh lo vour pleasure. Come lo C.hiiaKo and Home al Ihe ••|)l-;i- and you will spend the most enjoyable pari of Vrile. lel.-phi.iu- (lire.l lo Ihe hnlel. where a welrnnu- and p. Iiori I 1)1 I I ' UADO. (;liii;iii ) alli-nlion await HOLSTEINS and GUERNSEYS ; 3ivSS - - R.cf. ' i stored and hijjli ( radc cows and hcMrcrs scrvit-c hulls. Car- load or less. Hi( h t radc calves. $18 cacli. crated. W rite us; we nave wnat you want. j iuirfss EDGEWATER STOCK FARM FT ATKINSON WISCONSIN Pail 1 hawrence Luncli II IE PLACE 10 LLA 1 On the XiUcire J. c■lc The Roycrol . Slu.p Jjucktnaster EXCEPTIONAL VALUES IN DIAMONDS {rom $10.00 to $1,200.00 in Arti,tic -IWsonal Adornment Desk Sets ana Desk Articles Gtnthmrns and LaJi,, ' Wr.st Wauh,, Sliver Novelties Galore Buckmaster CorntrSt tt and Stuart S 1 xTcrwarc Cut Glass Milwaukee D r u i Company vvnolesale druggists Driiijs, (°li nii -nls, I ' litciil M« ' cliciiios, Forciijii iiimI l)oniosti - Sijiulri -.- , K! .-.rii- t iiilOils, NN ' iiK ' sjiixl l.iiiiior- Michijan and Jcfftr,..n St. Milwaukee Wi.con.in PIPERS PURE FOODS Largest Exclusive Cjrocery in Vvisconsin ' ■ ' 1 2. 7 Madi ' on. Wiv THAT S()MI;THI (; 1A URV G()(1DS WOMINS l AR HCM5TITCHINC MUTTONS COVERU) Miss llctty Miiuh Gowns 22b Sl.lc Sir ccl r,-Uphonc 302V Mud,s n. Vi, Varsity 13eauty Shop 41S N PARK ST Superiority in Hair DressiniJ am! bnampooin| OUR MOTTO QUALITY AND 1, lllCItNCY Male Y....r Appoinlmcnl, in Advance Phone 429 A M ASSAL. ' Ca ics ' oailor Jr. 221 State Street, MaJison PHOXP f.713 W... bimon 13ros. TWO STORES = Wholesale and Reta,! Fruits ana Groceries NiiKkJv home, Cictlinj; :in iriNpinilicin fi)r sjitirc Wisconsin National Bank of Milwaukee UNITED SIATES DEPOSITORY CAPITAL AND SURPLUS $3,000,000,000 OFFICERS L. J PETIT. Picideni UKRMW I WOI.F. Vicr-Pmidrni WILLIAM K ADAMS. Aniiolont Chicr W l 1 I K S, V rF.N. Vicc-Prc.idrnl F K Mi PHKRSfiN. A .ii.l.nt Chirr I I llVl .■ . I a.hicr A V D CLARKSON. A iiiliinl Chirr I RAN bllMLNS. Aui.lani Cwhirr FRIOJ R SIDLKR. Aui.l.nt Chirr HERMAN W 1-3KUCHE. M.n.gcr Saving. Drpurtmcnl BOARD OF DIRECTORS I. J PF.TIT r,r,hl,nl OI.IV ' KR C KULLFJl Prc.idcnl Wi.con in Tru.t Co. GllSTAVK PABST Prr-.idcnl P.b.l Brewing Co. R W HOIIC-.MTON Prc.idcnt Wilbur LumlK-r Co. I ' - TRI( k ( TIDAHY . . Prcsidcnl Cudahy Bro.. Co. l.l O 11 N DYKE ol Van Dyke. Shaw. Muskal « Van Dyke. Allorncya 1 ' n API K.R Prc idcnl D. Adicr Sons Clothini Co. Ill KM WW I ALK President The Fait Co. lll.NK ! 1 rllOMPSON . Capilali.l ll.LMl.Ml SMITH President Columbia fonslruclion Co. DR I HAS I ALBRIGHT Special Agent Northwentern Mutual Lile In. Co. . (. lUHKNlgUE Vice-President Taylor ei Bournique Co. 1 en IS St HRIBER Cashier Old National Bank qI O.hkosh I Kl ni KICK I SIVVF.R President Northwestern Malleable Iron Co. I 1I KI L.S RMANVILLE Vice-President H W. Johns-Manville Co. 11 l.R DAVIDSON President Harley-Davidson Motor Co. HLR.MAN F. WOLF . Vice-President WALTER KASTEN Vice-President Capital Stock . $2,000,000.00 Surplus and Undivided Profits 1.64I.482J9 ReKfVes iOLOSaO ) Deposit, - 17.414.447 10 „ - - .. -- . „.  ' _. .. • ' Iv L • ■M ' ' , ' .1 • l • ' • ,. • ■ • „ - .• „•••_.••• ' •-■ YUXTRA— XTRE-E-E ibcun.sin 1-) be W i ' iiiLn s . cmindr Ox dnight to Substitute Drop the Handkerchief in Place of TraJitional Rush. J- rJ ■ I •Viaclis 021, ' Wise M O Si ' 1 ' G} A G ' :!j a i J I li U i l ' L) H, Wa£tx ' €vet SHOES Exclus,vcly J. F. Rose uT Co. M. - WISCONSIN LUNCl (lood Service. .Moderate Price.- Tables for Ladies 423 sTATi: strei:t Vc coulcln t ihink of a titli.- f(ir ihis ;iiiic it iind vein Cijn have it A. H. jfrtlinu iHanutarliiiiim Jlriurlrii MaNUFACTURl Ourrh S cttcr jfratrrnity jlriurliy CLii. • FCIAL DESIGNS ON CLAS RINGS PINS. ETC 313 N LIBERTY ST ' ' ' t. BALTIMORE M D Thr •Svstetn will save y..u WORRY-TIME and MONEY. Why not Invcst.Rau PAUL S. WARNER 1 I I1U 1 each ' ' oLi How to D ince MISS SARI 1 ii:i h N ..1 cu ' ..rk ( 1I-. I.ii. h.r Ox lliill K.M.in l ; in - Miinlirr Innrr :ircl.- lnd.,rMd hv Mrs Vernon CjiMlc. Ned Wi- vhurn Kan Sawyer. Anna Pavlova. : W I IN ST IMi.. ll!(ll TELEPHONE 7 9 4 o r i o clvc Urixcl oy O o o DO OD DO OQ 21 EAST MAIN STREET f AI ' ITAl. f ITY HANK HLDG THF MERCHANTS cS: SAMNGS BANK MADISON. WISCONSIN Offers You A BROAD and PROMI ' SRRX ' ICE Twi. ' tt DrHls Taps and Dies Reamer. - Milling Cullers Grinding Machines Etc. 1 Morse Twist Drill M Machine Co. N.w Bedford, Massachusells LANDSCAPE GARDENING Villi Make a HOME BEAUTIFUL, a Place to Take ar.sity F-riencl.s Harvard and Cornell Experts Draw Our Plans COE. CONVERSE EDWARDS COMPANY Wisconsin ' s Largrst Nurseries FORT ATKINSON . . . - WISCONSIN THE LIT CHANGES ITS ATTITUDE I inu- .ind piihln. opin- ion work mjin chjinni— and this I , not ihc knst of I hem oiR siK)R ' iT;sr sroR ' coxn-sT wiih insisung on running c ci b(jcl s. middle niin-.c. jnd other cle cr shift . we id just enough copy to fill the Badger when scmeonc went nnd lost l.eroy Burlingame s jirmary, and now we have to write abcui three thousand column inches ol dope to fill in the ji- ' p We feel hopeful, like the sky-rocket editor when he is looking for jokes in his old standbys — the World Almanac, or the Northwestern L ' ndcrtakers Review But. unlike him. we have an idea W hv not have a Shortest Storv contest ■■ ST ' - A- , un Contestant I Candidate for B. S works eight month-- on thesis I ' nivcrsal Solvent Flunks be- cause he cannot find a container that will not dissolve and let the )uicc run away Contestant 1 1 Sigma Phi pledge dreams that he is wan- dering up State street dres.sed in nothing but his pledge pin. Wakes to find that It is true Contestant III Dad Grosser runs for Class President Gets two votes Is arrested for repeating Contestant I Frosh. fearing flunk, calls up his beauti- ful Spanish teacher to ask her for a date I ler husband answers the phone Contestant ' W. C. T. L ' . president from up state hails affluent looking ta.xi. She climbs aboard, and discovers that it is the stew-wagon headed for Middlett)n Contestant 7 Young professor offers to lend pretty co-ed his lecture notes By mistake gives her his Uivc letters instead Dclts blocks, parson Contestant 1 1 pursue likely lofiking chap fixe Pledge him. and find that he is a Contestant III Two measuring worms start racing down fair co-ed s skirt Come to end three feet before they expect it Fall off and break their necks A p.ar.afmj: of xlts And low. and behold cm. there wished itself onto Wisconsin an Liastcrncr: and he had a learned top which performed the function of affording a spot whereupon a lid. might rest — and he could glibly quote yards from W ' ebsters. And it came to pass that his quoting flattened before most, and he pulled his stakes and : cat It. . nd they called u McNutt. .And in the course ' ui iiu, ,, ii. of da s he writ for pa- pers and i apers and in his sweet Miniliiude of imaginings he drew a picture of the Uni ersiiy of Wisconsin. And the press laughed with li. L. T. .Xnd .Madison lent and .Awning com- pany donated a canvas figure, and Standard Oil presented kerviscnc .And there was a (ire. I ut. say wc: CJlory us. glory us, For It don I gel by iin more with us. . nd the next time it s tried we II raise- an awlul luss And we II crown em on the cru t with a stone t Gitts for All Occasions ON WONDERFUL ARRAY Our stock of Diamond-.. WatL-hc .Jcwclrv Silverware and Cut Cl .-. i the finest and most extensive in Southern Wisconsin Tfc. namcnJ pro.t.tt ot C.n.m . G AMMS PKonc 1404 9 W. Ma.n St iL h n 111 p i i 11 ii ' ti (0 r I li r 5 1 ra HI .1 ii I 11 II A R L ' quibiie in DrcbbKi}; Well RIPPS LOW SHOES or M E N Ri p Si loi : Si lop A. U. J. . 1 KI.Di:RICK.S()N General Contractors Pme. Hemlock Hardwood Lumber M.iniifiicturers of Eiuildcrs ' Muleriul MADISON WISCONSIN St. N icho las Restaurant Stea 5 that melt in t oi r mouth Bc-n Stitgen Pro prictor 2(1 W t ' St Vlain St Madison 1 ent 6t Awning Companx Phone tiO J 1ilnufuctu c « ! ininfis. tents, iiils, llu); - fii pcnnum iT i ' s I ransk-r I .iiu- A (I I o 1. i V e r y Baggage Sen- ire T a X ' i  ■ynr So S Ofi ' 4° ' ' • ' ■ ' ' THK CHOCOLATE SHOP I l.w i: oL I ricJ our delicious Sundaes? Tastedciir excellent Luncheons r Experienced the nicet ol olh Service? Noticed our complete ana I ' l Novelties? found out c ha c die (lantl) ' ' ou like? ii (yr COME l n SEE I 528 State Street TMERE is just enousjh difference in clothes to mark a man as conspicuous- 1 ill-drcssed Or to give him that look of quiet dislinclion which onl ' the perfection of the tailor s art can achieve. Jerremsconscr ati e tailor- ing gi es _ ou that air ol individuality, that necessary personality that keeps ones appearance from being commonplace. Suits and Overcoats Prices $35 to $75 ) I). Serse wfiv-Iils and new weaves fcatunns ihe Barathea and Whipcord Officers ' Uniforms $45 to $65 Overcoats $60 to $75 leMCTnA bailor for Voiiiia ?Zcll 7 N.iiih I.;i Salic Sireci y Sciiiili Michigan . v n i;,isi MoiiKio siKv • 77) .s ' Is the IIiiiuc lit Zil isch Pure Milk C o. Milk iWf ,.!., M , Ice Ocam Cream Butter 62 (.vt Washington Avenue (•K-| h()iu- 97 ' - M;ulis()ii, Wis. MARINELLO SHOP Mr. Xn, X n|jcl. Co nieli..n Facial and Scalp Treatments a Speciallu C«ni| lctr Line of M.rincllo Prepsralioto Telephone 79 22i Stale Si ' Drug Store Service tha Convincingly tS. rves We liavc the thint; that you w have lean up-to-date stores, -onipetent and courteous clerk ant. Wc Wc hav r th u. .,lway. . SAFETY FIRST The Menges Pnarmacics SUMNER CRAMTO imiXiS AM) PIIOIO SI PPL 1 1 Special Department for Defelopin Printing and Enlarging O70 State Street Madison. W ; Open Day and Ni,;lu J fterson Transfer Com pany ■Phone No. 7 live- and Seven Passenger Touring Cars Taxi Cabs and Baggage Service MADIS() WISCONSIN Extr i-i . L X L 1 Ll . DAILY CARDINAL cUl d CHI PHI AMALGAMATED i ( i H llie 1 ' IN-I ' ) Oi„ s (Jirdmiil niunaKiriK i-Jitor. the Mr Hdward ' ' (-hill UcusN. lakes pleasure in annt uneintt the tulliminii api )intmcnts J to the Mall lur ihe cominu voir 1 he uppiiinlnicnts ha e all been fl made on the merit svstcm. reuular attendance at chapter nieet- . 1 1 . JkW H ' ' ' - d aiUKl attendiinee at liihle K-ino the inmn )ji. L.rs in the i-ht icr SW ' - ' ' • ' • | .MIi..ns •k Urt M William J„hn 1 laakeHt..iin«.i an,«f ' 1 rJ I B fl l. d Morton Stnipe — . ' 3ii5t«n( Mantieint l-Uiitcr H yB fl Morion () en Withev-Cnityfjilv iiil. H H p- - H .Mlie l.lovd Hrevfoue! . .iii.«u.w ( niief. i v (ijil.-r H B M . Stiekev Keieherl. llanildKolfN.xr— ).-ilt -::jiM i P BBV • _ , William Henry Kiekhofcr -.■Wifrt e li,lilor Z- - losci Homes Hciich .■ .i.i..«.in( MhlrUc luliM, M B Vdam .,use Millar A i iMry KWiror ;.. ( i, i V... „ ,.„„ „„„„ ,„„. Na-on John Mate. Cirrold Burgh Htxlsins .V v, lu l-raturr W .il«i , i (df ih,lh lum r Rest ,,l the t hi Hii Mrmhen. and Plednes -«eN.tf rj ' •A W ISCI I1SI I I I ' lodncl • ' Obc 3fome of (Tomplcte JriutiUk Service j onotype Pre,, Room Composition and New Typ. B,nJiry on Ev ri4 Faclit.e, Job ;.-••:; j ' .-i i ' tisurftassed i:;: ' N i 7 HI III HI ■!  «ii -k a :j9 iM ' •-■ ■« r. W I..I-.- 1 1.. • Hn.lii-r t.-.l i i k I (• ( s ( a t ;i I (I l;u( ' s l.illi( crji| ' l l or Steel ICiiijiiivecl C ' )ii|t n I  in(l ;i ikI M rt j;i _;c Notes Slock ( i-rl ilic.ilo vTaiitwiiU rititin (Tompauv II -1)1 III riM KM. ' i IIU.I.l. MADISON. W.- l(I.N.sl.N Mippin;4 One (K,, lU Mippin O.u I ARE YOU A MEMBER OF Morgan s Student CKid? S emhcrshift: Composed or All tlic Rcpiilar Fellows ' Dues: Payable in MalteJ M.Ik J eetJngs: Held Every Morninj , Afternoon and Niplit 9 otto: What Care We If the Town Is Dry You Arc VVclcomc C onii- In unJ ■ cc L ' s 5.34 STATI-: STREET i ' li L hlL LjD iiiil«lllllllllllllllll«lllllllll!llllililiiililii«ililBilil ' lllTj ' V G j £jTil ' li[::h3 ' j! oD - ' J ' J l oili ' h -j (- ' ■-■ ( ' i ' sifc ' .jii ' jii a CJ ail iJriii T ' O B iVi. Best Values 1 li: ILMA.WS D.Wi.K.IM B Ki;k ' ,■, VI, isen s Doot SKop Style .nJ Q„al,ty for Student- H4 SIATI, IRhCT •IlKMAN ' S DMLKATESSEN Picnic Lunche, a S[ c-ci«l.v Open Sund.y, All D«v ' Tflcpl,,,,,,- liVI II2 Stale Sir NELSONS Inurlcrs :- SdurtsinilJis 112 E. MAIN ST. H. E. PROUTY Shoe Repairing Company M Stjtc St MADISON ' WIS CKas. WeKrman ? Son Trunks and Leather QcoJs Pl.n„c bM, llbK.ntS, MADISON WISCONSIN fiuringcr-Liarbutt Co l-HOENIX SILK HOSIERY -omplele Lineal Ladici- Sil Glare, i- l.ouis Button Co. •4S( Stale St IVIeplu ;if;iclurcrs ,,f |5,,dKi. (v I ' lnv CcIIuLmJ Uut,„. t-ii Lucas Ave. St. Louis. . 1,. Oil, Doctor! Let Me Live! Mr. Scott. Ihc- Badger ' ■, c:ity. Dear Mister: I am enclosiriR this photo, which was taken Somewhere in I- ranee When this photo was taken, the Ockc (hv he way, ihe l kes are strong in the East- this one being piiriicularly .so in the eastern part of France)— wouldn ' t allow the photo- grapher to get him in the light so the Thetas who occasionally walk into our Kxige in their attempts to find their own house would recogni-e htm in case we hang the picture m our parlJr l-ollowing the custom so well observed hv the IXke brothers here in .Madison when lei - rng a Mixer, he pulled out his hat and pulled it over his face in order to shade his phvsog rise lo ai-K)Iogize (or this intrusion but I didn I want you to think this man an African xcause he isnt -honest, he ' s a DEKE. n he lived right here in the IXke house once ux, ' I hank you. Mister Editor ' Dot rv IXv.sii ... ' -). ' ' ! :„;. ' ;:: ' ' ■ ' ■ ' ' T ? ' ' ' • ■■ ' ' ■ • ' • ' • ' ' ■ ' .I ' .in ,1 ,i,„l h.„ I, hune in the i .fufv nru urrk lo, i, .„- ■ ■ m 11 .1 tutteMum r..r ihe l.ikini c) hicliirrt uhith m,- ■ ' ■• ' ' ' ■• -T ' li.-r, : ) l( l r l W hcti interested in eqiiipnient tor the Creamery Cheese Factory Ice CrccDu Plain Dairy Both Lar e X Small W R I I ' I- T 1 e Creamery Packa j, Company FORT A ' rKINSON, WIS. We aiso manujuciiire ihe Lirccn Mi ' iinlam e Mfg. (No bix k would be complete will ' out this.) I l-.CE f.ARKII ' Wisconsin Alleys Keep Oiirself in Trim by BOWLING ■ ii ilu- :(iin.- I iiiK- |-,i)ji ' l oiirseif 6. 0 State Street XARSIT S 1 1 1 N II anJ REPAIR SHOP ■ Niclc has Ko r to Wor but we ' ll havco two  lory building (or him when he comes bocli I ' hnnc 2036 iff Stale CAt Your Service l i:-,y«.ffi ' 5 Kink iUld Her Beta In ) y. c.ir can She Study: Pat ' ' ' 62 I N the matter of .se-rvicc- contributing to the con c-nicnce of its patrons Brcvoort Hotel is strongly indiviJual. Two ExccDt-nt Restaurants Qualiti of service, moderation in charges Brevoort Hotel CHICAGO Madison St., East of La Salle : URE CE R ADAMS. Secretary y Manager -fHfHftHf V jprercve c j G c p A cls A■l |■G ■fior , LOOK back over the past years and aok yourself what other Engraving Institution, specializing in college annuals, has wielded so wide an influence over the College Annual Field? Ask yourself if College and University Annuals are not better to- day because of BUREAU PROGRESSIVENESS and BUREAU INITIATIVE? You know that the BUREAU OF ENGRAVING, Inc. inaug- urated the system of Closer Co-operation with college annual boards in planning and constructing books from cover to cover. Our marked progress in this field commands attention. Our establishment is one of the largest of its kind in this country. Our Modern Art Department of noted Commercial Art Experts is develc-ing Artistic Features that are making Bureau Annuals Famous for Originality and Beauty. And again, the help of our experienced College Annual Depart- ment is of invaluable aid. Cur up-to-the-minute system, which we give you, and our Instructive Cooks will surely lighten your Burden. A proposition from the Natural Leaders in tl .3 College Annual Engraving field from an organization of over LO people, founded over 1 7 years ago, and enioying the Confidence and Good Wdl cf li.e foremost Universities of this country, is certainly worth your w hile. Is not the BUREAU OF ENGRAVING, Inc., Deserving of the Opportunity cf showing what it can do for - YOU ? BUREAU of ENGRAVING, Inc. MINNEAPOLIS MINNESOTA tlHEi il t ■cA r 7ina. 21: m BANK OI ' WISCONSIN For tin- •■.MiviMiiciici ' I.I mil- I lUMTsiCy friends wo li iivo lociilcd in your ntiil.st — curnor Stato iiiid (iiliiian Streets 7 t .-y Hi - BElTliR LAIL III.W E IIR ;• NOT THI I IML ' Two Gammy Phi ' s had a date for n P.in-Hcllcnic dinner at the Tri I clt house Ihev were late. v they hurried Th-v .rrn..i ... id und hungry and full of nnticipiititm for ii ({ nd me.il. only to be asked. AVys ti vou wanted to sec ' ' Why, yes. we came for the Pan- f ellenlc dinner ■Well i the table is full. was the reply, and the dear jjirls hur- ried N - - ' ■. h.n.111. t .„. . hll-X- BORDENS Malted Milk EAGLE BRAND HAS NO EQUAL fiOROfN ' sCONOENStoMllKCo NtVV YOPH, U 5 A BRAIN WORKERS are nian times careless with their diet. After a long eve- nings work. the arc apt to eat a heavy meal, which in- vites its own punishment. If instead, just before retiring, the would tr a cup of BORDEN ' S Malted Milk : l IHt SQUARE PACKAGE Steaming hot. restful and refreshing sleep would be induced, affording excel- lent preparation for the next days work. As a noon lunch also. BORDFLN ' S is useful. Vhc rich, creamy, appctiz ing flavor is enjoyed by all. Ask for and insist upon BORDEN ' S at the fountain. ; v. f : ' EM1 ,.i].;jl: to I lis Majesty the Uni ersitv Student (iOHOhi -S - ICY WATCRS The Photoart House WM. J. Ml-.ll-.K, l BKs. KODAKS K()I 1 IIMM 1I C, [-K 1I X THH K. 11:R. KR. I-T si lOP SI A IE Al l-RA. C;tb SlRliL-.l MADISON. W ISCONSIN W t ' solutl mail orders on Fralernily Die Slani[iin and Engraving. Master Develop ing and Printing of Amateur Films and Kixlaks. Write Us Your Wants. Pa , .••(■; The Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company ...ta v? ' -5 m i Hill! r- . _, r ' ■ ; J ■■ u IB lu III 111 l-jJj Sgr To the Students and Alumni: Do you know that the Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company of Mil- waukee is the only company that has maintained a separate organization for the accommodation of its University of Wisconsin business Do you know that the University agency last year placed nearly three-quarters of a million on the lives of students and members of the faculty of the University of WisconsmV Do you know that the Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company is a Wis- consin company and that it has grown to be the largest purely American company! Do you know that through the enormous taxes it pays to the state each year it aids materially in the development of the University of Wisconsin? Do you know that its contracts are most liberal, that its net cost is low You need protection and the best time to get protection is when you are l cst able to procure it. Get it while you ' re young. It estabhshc your crc hl; it protects your estate. Ruflincss men curry large lines of msurance. Invctitigutc the NorlhwcHlrrn Mutual W. D. RICHARDSON, University Agent Commirciiil Niilioni.l Bank Buildini; cilir JFiriit -Xattmial llUuik itt Hiaiii ' .iiii. lHi ' .iniit iiii Capital and Surplus - - S38O.UUU.0U 60.UUU.UU 3.500.000.00 Certificates of D Interest paid on Savings Accounts and Time eposit. Transacts a general banking business. I ssucs Travelers ' Cheques and Letters of Credit payable throughout the world Safe Deposit Boxes for rent at reasonable rates A E Pre udfit. Pro. M E. Fuller. V cr-Pin. Funk G Brown. Vicc-Prcs. M. C C iirkc. (  Sirr M H. S.trr. Ami. Chit, The Henr ' Street Jazz Bund McKillop Ruud Photographers STATE STREET le PORTRAIT SHOP Portraits by Photo raph lnn ' rf ' rating W L McKILI.OP I-;. G MAIM. IN N. B RLLO H H. HON1-: MO SI All- SI Ri:i; I Execuior Guardiati -Tni iee Central Wisconsin Trust C o ni p a n y MAniSON. WISCONSIN L ' nder Supcr ision of Banking Department Capital ajid Surplus $400,000 Wait a Minute READ THIS You nave seen tne aavcrtisements scattered tnruout this last section ana nave been interested in the appeals each one makes to you. 1 he various firms represented have made the puhlication or the 1919 BADGER possihlc hy n ' lvln it their loyal support. It IS evident therefore that it is your duty to return the compliment in t ivin(f them your trade, however small it may he. Read these ads over and over until the names hecomc familiar so that you ' w-ill make no mistake in giving the adver- tisers your patronage. ==: ======= =- Xj fi ' i; ' W ' d. [ ' u ' j ij ' d ' ' i 1 1 I our official O. K. jn this, our : i l pajjc of 15MdH -r copy, xc watch iho pressman as he iiiakes ready on the final form, and arc sorry it ' s all er It has been our aim in this ()lume to con- st met a monument to the Patriots ol W iscon- sin It has been done. too. with a scniiinc leeluiji that the real patriots of Wisconsin arc the Wisconsin ol- unteers. who stand on the firing line, ready to lay down their lives lor their country. These arc men — that brave array of manhcxxi and valor who form the true frontier of the nation and who once formed the true Wisconsin ' ■And so this Badfjcr was built with mingled feelings of regret that we were here. We trust, though, that this volume will li e in the history of Wisconsin as the War Badger. To the many persons who o willingly helped on this book we are extremely grateful. We wish to express our keen apprecia- tion to Mr. M H liaumgartner. of the Cantwell Printing Com- pany The dark hcurs of an abbrev iated editorial career have been brightened through his association, and a well printed olume is due to his careful attention and splendid interest. Miss Madelyn Stanchfield ' s willing cix)peralion as .Art editor will never be forgotten. Mr. Kenneth Jkott, .Miss Florence King and Miss Margaret Melaas deserve great credit for the ex- cellent manner in which they handled their rcspectixe sections I he entire Badger board, especiilly Miss Irene Haley. .Miss Mariorie Kinnan. Mr Paul Oanelield. Miss Margaret Lewis. Mr Harold Cill. Mr 1 h mas Tultle. Mr [idward IXuss. and Mr Gunnar Cj. Cjundersen deser e much praise in the work the ha e done We are indebted to Krank Birch, editor of the UHM Badger for many aluable sugL ' esiions. Here ' s to you Wisconsin! — your ' re a Greai Old .S.hool to serve — hul now for the .Armv ' -TMl- CniioK. II ■-. Ailvcrtiscrs ' Index Hank i ' ( V i.vomin tiaillic- Icd.iuisi . Hcmurvl UcKic Line HiicO Printing Co Durdm ' s Matted M.Ik H..vd I ' ichtcn . . H..VJ. Ji M . Co BriKjlcy Studio Urc t ort HchcI Hn .ksBn„ . HuckmuMcr Jcuclry t . liundc i I ' pmeycr Bureau tit EnRra ' inR Cant cll PnntinsCt ' Onirnl ' I Trust Cj Chocolate Shop. The Cck: 0 n%cr« 6l Edward- OilleKc Refectory Conklin S.n.1 CreanKrv l- nckage Comr-i-. Cumberland Hotel Dc LonRc Studio Del Prado Hotel HdRcwater Dairy C o l-hrman ' s Delicatessen I cttinK Jewelry MIr. CJ3 I .elds. Mrs San . . i TM National Bank lord Studio . . . n. A D J V i ' rcry ' CjirK)n Co ... . :.L.iter jrrctt Studio ' uld. Wcll« BlocktHiri ' ' fund Theater I f.ix ell F ' umiturc Cx I Ic.lmann Bakery ILRKin. Chtt M 0. irnl.n. Park . . M t ,1 - Malted Milk fj I |. . ri..,.. I I 1,11. r . NluU W t: Wo 518 5 TO Murmello SIlop 5 5o Mavsal Ci . I iiilor- 54i ' Mnut: P.H.I Hull SJM McKiMop-Ruud. PliiitoKrnphers 5;il McnRcs Pluirn icics SYti Merchants ■ Savins Bunk 5? I Milwaukee DruR C:o Wi Milwaukee Journal 52? Minch I Ictwy 54t Molloy. David J SJi VforRan ' s 558 Morse I wist Drill 0 551 Nelson. O M 560 Nelherwood PnntinK ( ' o 531 Nonhwcslern Lile Insurance C4) 5tJ! tllsen-Veerhuscn Co. . 5}| Orphcum Theater 5)1 Pantonum Co 538 PhottMirt l-lousc 567 Piper Bros 54t, Portrait Shop 570 Prim Shop 536 Prouly Sh(X- Repair Shop 560 Rcierson St(jdio 540 Republican House 510 Ripp ' s Shoe Store ?53 Runkels Barber Shor- 517 Sanncs Institute . Savinfcs Loan Trust ( ii Schneider Studio . SmiKkcr. Tailor . 553 Speths . . 530 Stilfzen Ben 53J St Uiuis Button C. 537 Sumner Oamton 535 Tcckemcvcr Chocolates . 5t Thomas Stiidio 53 1 ThompMm Orchestra 537 1 hurinfier Ctarhult 5)1. 531 L-niversity Omip AsMxiali liniversily Supply Asaociat Varsttv Beauty Parlor Varsity Shine Repair Shop Verges I ' ransler Line Walk-Over B x t SK.p ))2 546 iJ ) 553 553 5M 556 560 52 ' 548 54 ' l 510 (141 tuikc l-nccx Cj Lawrence LurKh Mock. Herman Book index Aoiciu -11 Ml Acholh 4i 2 ActivmcvSccu.m. Womins 121 Advcnistnn Clul-t . - 474 AdininiMruiiiin Sixliiin H ' Agriculture. l.i llcR .- ol 1 Agriculturul AsvKiuli,)n 487 Attriculturnl Lilcrarv SiKicty 287 Alpha c:hi OncKa 4 i Alpha Chi SiRnia . . - 424 Alpha Dtlla Phi J ' 14 Alphallamma l .lla 4(i() Alpha tiammu Kho 4)2 Alpha Omicron I ' l 4(vl Alpha Phi 450 Alpha Siiima Phi 408 Alpha 1 au (VniRa 402 Alpha Xi IXlla 4 8 Alpha Zcla ' 48 Arthcry 210 Anus 1S A S M !■; 47t. Athcnac 282 Athlclic Section 15 ' Athletics. Womcns 221 Athletic Board 155 Athletic ANNOciatu.n V..nlens 223 ■ aWa Men I i ' UadKer li.iarJ..I I ditur . . 2 ' 8 Badger Scene-- 248 Band ' Ot Barnard 1 lall 127 Basel%all 185 liavehall. Women- 212 Hasel all. Women - Ould « r 2 ' 2 Ba-ketball 17 ' Buskethall. Imerfralernitv ... 201 ' Baskethall. Women - 22 ' Beta Ciammii Sigma ' 51 Beta Theta Pi ' 70 Bluenragon il Board ol Regent- 120 Board of Vi-.tor- 121 Bowling Interfraterniis 220 Bowling. Interv.roritv 214 IV.wlmg. Women- 2 ' 5 ( Jimp lire C.irl- II ' ji-talia 288 f:hadl .urne Hall 12l. (Ihinc-e Students ' (■|u ' - 482 {:hi Omega 454 Chi Phi 412 ( .hi Pm Cla-Ku-h Clas-e- Sec i ( ;iu-s mricer- SVoMi CIctCltih Cluh ' . (i cJ Section (ardlniil ( eJ Pau (i.llegeol Agriculli. t ollege ol l nuineer Ij.llcgC ol UlW ■Cjillege of [.etter- anc tx)llege of Medicine CA)mmercc Cluh . . Oimmerce Club. Wor Commerce Magazine C.« n-umers ' League 0)ngreKational Stude Ointent- Page Copyright Otuntry Magazine Course in 0 mmerte Daily Cardinal Dedication Delta Delta Delta Delta Gamma Delta Kappji Kpsilor Delta l hi Up-ilon Delta Sigma Kho Delta lau Delta Delta llpsilon Deut-ches Haus . Dramatics lidwin B x)thCluh ■engineers ' C ' luls. L ' - of W l£nBincers ' Cluh. Chen Hnginecrmg. College o [ c]ual SulTrage League Hla Kappa Nu liuthenics Cluh . l-.xlension Driision I- nal Oratorical C«jnte linal hml-lem l ' .x,ll-all - , I ' .K.tWill. Inlercollegc |-.«.lhall. I ' reshman l- ' orensic Seetu n . l-orensie W Men . I ' oreword l- ' reshinan (.onii-et Ciamma Phi Beta Camma I au Beta tlermanististhet.e- I le-|xr llockev I l.«;kei 247 Ho 481 452 442 477 478 414 488 2(« 2W 118 21b Book Index Cotititiued lnd i,.r Ru cl ull. WonicnS ::,s InJiwr Track 1 cum 187 In Mcnxinam 12 Inner ( ulc J i? tnccrcolicKiutc L chatcs 2tH tnira-Munil Sport I ' M lowtt C:iuh HII IronCm v 1, I Joint DcKato 2t 4 Junior E 278 Junior tlflkcn. IIW Junior ( Ipen 278 Junior Play 2S8 Kappa Alpha Thcta 44t Kappa Kappa Gamma +40 Kappa SiKma 388 Key«onc )|| lambda Chi Alpha 4lt Law. CollcRC of 14 ' Lcllcrs and ScictK-c. College or 125 Library School I SI Literary Masazine 244 Lutheran Student.% 481 Medicine. CollcRc of 145 McTh-trah Society 481 Methodi, t Students 485 Military Department 2 ' l Ktilitary Ball ?0: Mortar Board .... - Jh2 Music, C oursc in ... . |4 t .Mystic Circle 1  Nclxn 1 niphy 2IHI N O L (jmtcst . 27t Numeral Wearers. Clai« of l  l« 157 1micronNu .... 157 (Vatnrv ... 277 Orcuniiacian ScctHKi 4 l l an I lellenic As «:iatioo Um I ' hi Alpha I eltu 42t. I hi Beta Kappa . I4t 1 1 Beta l i 410 I ' hi IJelta I ' hi .422 I ' hi I lta I hct.i ll-8 l-hiLammaDcli.! 182 I ' hi Kappu SiRma 1 X) I ' hi KapTw ISi 172 I ' hi Lambda Upsikxi I4 I 111 Sigma Kappu 40l I ' l Beta I ' hi 448 I ' l Tau SifVtia 158 INi( ' r Ml n I8j Chilonvuhui 28i 148 221 l --al .n„n., i„ Kcdliaunilct JIH KcKimcntal (Xliccrs 2 ' Scablvird and Blade )()4 Scmi-I ' ublit Del- aics ..... 275 s t; A ; : 121 S C, A WartJiuncil |24 S -™ ' « 122 Senior W Men |{h Senior l)pen 27n SiKma .Mpha LpMlon Im, SmmaChi 17,, SiRma Delta Chi j 5 s Siitma Delta I ' m 105 Sifima Nu . 31)2 SiRmu Phi 404 Sigma Sigma 152 Skull and Crescent lt 4 Sophomore (XTicers ... . . 113 Sophomore Open 2W S niritics 430 Spanish ( lub 472 Stage. The . 24( Spirit of t l 14 ■Spirit III T 7 . IS Stadium. Wi conMn New . . . R Star and Arrow 3( Swimming Team ... 212 Tau Kappa l£psik n 420 Tau Beta Pi 347 Theta Chi 414 Ihcta IXItaChi J84 Ihelji Sigma I ' hi 154 Ihcta . i 43(, 1 itle Page | Itack 185 I rack Records |il4 Track, Women ' s .... ... 211 Irianglc 428 lurkey Kace .181 Iwellth Nighl ... . . 255 L ' nion B.«inJ 4t8 LlnionVodyil 25n University, Ihe 151 V,m I lise. President C R . , |b W A A , . 22b White Spades .163 Wisconsin in War lime J2 l Wisconsin Lngineer 240 W Men . |5h ■W ' WiHncn 225 Women s Alhtcliu 221 Yellow lasscl 3I 1 Y M C A Cabinet . . • . 470 Y N t: A l .rmitofy 471 Y W C A I in Y W C A Activities 128 :«a P ' l 410 iCuillerv phoiodraishs o( Deans appcarin in schxil hcaJmss of AUministrntHin Seetkin cnrvrighied b l ( LonK M di««o W. ' ri IS n BSBBraSTETT ' iSaRfflBlTr ' T Tfll L, ' K ' :4. ' {• y- ' •:?:■. ' ;: ' ••• : ■ ' ■■r ' t i viJttiD


Suggestions in the University of Wisconsin Madison - Badger Yearbook (Madison, WI) collection:

University of Wisconsin Madison - Badger Yearbook (Madison, WI) online collection, 1916 Edition, Page 1

1916

University of Wisconsin Madison - Badger Yearbook (Madison, WI) online collection, 1917 Edition, Page 1

1917

University of Wisconsin Madison - Badger Yearbook (Madison, WI) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 1

1918

University of Wisconsin Madison - Badger Yearbook (Madison, WI) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 1

1920

University of Wisconsin Madison - Badger Yearbook (Madison, WI) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 1

1921

University of Wisconsin Madison - Badger Yearbook (Madison, WI) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 1

1922


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